10-17-1923 - Village of Pinckney

Transcription

10-17-1923 - Village of Pinckney
PINCKNEY DISPATCH
=*IPI
Vol.40
Pinckney, Livingston County, Michigan, Wednesday, October 17, 1923
[WHITE HOUSE
CONFERENCES ARE NOT
ALWAYS SERIOUS
sMoLAy&H <£
W A S H I N G T O N , I). <.'. W h i t e H m ^ c
c o n f e r e n c e s a r c n o t <IIM;I\.S as s e r i o u s
a s t h e y a p p e a r t o be to o u t s i d e r s . T w o
interesting
stories
about
President
R o o s e v e l t w e r e t o l d r e c e n t l y bv .1.
Frederick Kssary, himself the Washingt o n c o r r e s p o n d e n t for t h e B a l t i m o r e
S u n , in which a c o - w u r k e r , Col. K<lw a r d 1$. C l a r k ,
Western
Newspaper
c o r r e s p o n d e n t at the Capital tigured as
the other character.
ANN ARBOR
SNUG WARM COATS
~&p'*
^L^..Jt
LA
FOR UTTLE GIRLS
\4s~'
SMART FROCKS
For the School Girl
Some time later, when R o o s e w l t had
d e c i d e d to t r y f o r a t h i r d t e r m , he
sent out w o r d to all t h e W a s h i n g t o n
c o r r e s p o n d e n t s to g a t h e r at the While'
House. They arrived and
Uonscielt
c a m e in. H e b o w e d fo (lie g a t h e r i n g
a n d t h e n l o o k i n g a r o u n d , saw C l a r k ,
a n d b e c k o n e d to him for a p r i v a t e t a l k .
F o r half an h o u r , a w a \ off to one side,
t h e t w o men a r g u e d u n t i l the P r e s i d e n t
w a s satisfied a n d t h e n he went a n d
t a l k e d tn the hotly of n e w s p a p e r men,
F o r m o n t h s Col. C l a r k r e f u s e d to ted
what R o o s e w l t had t a l k e d a b o u t u n ' i l
one d,n In a d m i t t e d t h a t it u ,s ..11
a b o u t a new species of bird that the
P r e s i d e n t Ii.nl d i s c o w r e d on one of
his t r i p s .
K v c r y l i t t l e girl w o u l d like t o w e a r h e r S u n d a > h o t e v e r y d a y
— •but s h e will c e a s e t o l n n g f o r t h a t if M o t h e r b u y s stylish
school frocks here.
They a r c of wool J e r s e y , s e r g e , t r i c o t i n e
and other fabrics, fashionably mode.
I'riccd *2.9H to $7..10.
(Mack's Basement Store)
HOWELL
MICH.
GIFTS THAT LAST
Col. Clark is merelv nne of the ln_r
staff of w r i t e r s w h o a r e w r i t i n g a r t i cles t h a t a p p e a r n; T h e I h s p n t c h e.n h
week.
M a i n of t h e s t o r i e s j u i i see ri
o u r c o l u m n s with W a s h i n g t o n -is i
b a c k g r o u n d c o m e from this m m . tl >•
i n t i m a t e friend of the n a t i o n ' s g r e a t .
T h e y a r e all men of the highest stan
da r d s ; t he i•oiiltdants ol f a m o u s nn n
in ill lines. We feel fort una t e in lirn J.
able to c o m m a nd the s e n lees of MM h
w r i t e r s , si ho ,irc able to ilr,i« lug s.ii
,a\ries t r o m m e t r o p o l i t a n new spa pci s
but w h o are p r o u d to w r i t e for t h e
p e o p l e who in i ke up t he re a I < il i/cn
s h i p of this < mint rs . the I a a l e r s m t !•'•
s m a l l e r c o m m u n i t i e s like o u r s .
JEWELRY-DIAMONDS-WATCHES-CLOCKS ETC.
Exclusive Agents for
ROCKFORD
Higher than Standard Silverware
FRY - GLASS
The Improved Sanitary Oven Glass
CEO. H. CHAPEL
l h
»
n Caimty's Oldest Qatametriit.
A wcemful
aractice fir i perna eavtrisf aver thirty-fits. Yuri.
We carry the largest stock of Victrolas and Victor Records
Between Detroit and Lansing
We Have Your Favorite
W e are H o w e l l ' s L e a d i n g a n d
Victor
Original
(SAYS WOMEN FAIL TO
KEEP PACE PHYSICALLY
Store
You'll Do Better At
CHAPELS
T h a t physical e d u c a t i o n should he
^considered before mental development
a n d t r a i n i n g , is t h e betrrf of H r . M n t g a r e t Bell, a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r of pliVMleal e d u c a t i o n
at t h e
liusersitv
of
Sliehigan.
Dr. Hell, who has reccnllv
j'couie h e r e from S a n l - ' m r i n s o i to t a k e
u p h e r w o r k , s t a t e d t h a t she felt a:l
s t u d e n t s should consider their health
( a n d p h y s i c a l c o n d i t i o n first, a n d then
give a t t e n t i o n to s t u d i e s ,md o t h e r in| terests.
In s p e a k i n g of t h e g e n e r a l he.dth of
w o m e n Dr. Bell s a i d : " W h e n w o m e n
e n t e r p r o f e s s i o n a l fields on an cipial
[ p l a n e with m e n , it is not in m e n t a l i t y
t h a t t h e y fail to k e e p p a c e , b u t in
physical e n d u r a n c e . "
HiS MASTERS VOlC
BARNARD'S
October
2, th« F o r d
Motor
duced
prices
on
all
Ford
re-
Cars
and
rauj u m v a i a t i , CAB
Trucks:
Roadster
$265.00
Touring Car
$295.00
Coupe
$525.00
Four Door Sedan
$685.00
$230.00
Buaineas men—with whom the runabout he* always 1
popular—are vefl pleased with the change* eaboda*
model
Always rugged, the car has been made decidadry trimmer « » 1
more comfortable.
This result is obtained by Huang the racketc* and enlarging 1_^
cewl. making a decided i m p r o w m ia looks and n leanf
more leg room.
Truck Chassis
$370.00
All Prices F. O. B. Detroit
T h e s e are the l o w e s t prices in all F o r d
history.
W i t h the recent c h a n g e s
refinements
that
have
been
and
made
every body t y p e , F o r d Cars now
new
values
in
motor
A well designed top and slanting wtodahiesd d o their share
toward adding a Brushed, clean-cut appearance.
Make it a point to see the other new atodefc also on display fan
our show room
That cars ctit be obtmmed
the Ford Wttkly
Pmtch*-
in
through
PUm.
offer
transportation.
E s p e c i a l l y is this true of the new F o u r door
Sedan
with
and many added
The
priceof
the
its
streamline
body
conveniences.
Fordson
Tractor
has
been increased $ 2 5 . 0 0 , m a k i n g the present price $ 4 2 0 . 0 0 F. O. B. Detroit
You can take a d v a n t a g e of
these
new
Ford
prices
through
the
Weekly
Purchase
Plan
OAKS
TRUCKS • TRJVCTOBwS
R. DAY BIRD
•
.
»
PINCKNEY
FORD SALES AND SERVICE
[NEW FIRE RATES SAVE
$2,000,000 PREMIUMS
W£**
SATURDAY SPECIALS
Tomato soup
r * 'v*
W e wish t o e x p r e s s o u r
sincere
-thvinks tn t!ie f r i e n d s ;md neijrlihof*
f o r t h e i r k i n d n e s s a n d f o r tlic Ixvnttlful s o n g s r e n d e r e d a t t h e f u n e r a l of
our d e a r h u s b a n d and fnthcr.
M r s . A. I I . Tsham,
>fr. a n d M r s . R. H . Ishiiin
:»nd F a m i l y .
Mr. a n d M r s . II. L. Jsh.nti
Family.
Regular
39c
Vahe
•A;
^&»
Effective
C o m p a n y a n n o u n c e s the f o l l o w i n g
T h e tirst o n e r e l a t e s how R o o s e v e l t ,
w h o , as is well k n o w n , w a s a l o v e r of
all o u t d o o r life, t e l e p h o n e d one clay to
Col. C l a r k , h i m s e l f a n o t e d b i r d - l o v e r ,
to rush o \ e r to the White House.
The
c o l o n e l w i r e d his office to be in r e a d i ness for a bitf s t o r y a m i d a s h e d o \ e r
to the President.
W h e n he a r r i v e d a n d
w a s u s h e r e d i n t o t h e P r e s i d e n t ' s den
it w a s to l e a r n t h a t " T e d d y " had di^
c o v e r e d a nest full of j u i i a j ; owls era
t h e W h i t e H o u s e g a r d e n s anil d e s i r e d
C l a r k ' s e x p e r t i n f o r m a t i o n on w h a t to
do to p r e s e r v e t h e l i i r d l i n g s .
T h e winter Coats for little g i r l s ' u r e indeed snugly w a r m .
W h a t feal will o n e h;ive of t h e c o l d w i n t e r y b l a s t s w h e n o p e
is w e a r i n g a s p o r t s l i k e t o p - c o a t or a d r e s s y affair w i t h a f u r
collar?
T i n y T o t s c o a t s a r e of c h i n c h i l l a a n d p r i c e d $5.95
a n d $ 7 . 5 0 while c o a t s in sizes 7 t o 14 a r e p r i c e d $5.00 t o
$17.95.
CHAPELS
New Ford Prices
fodMihsses
ffkrBest JUIW Oats
Best Tomatoes
Yeast Foam
GREGORY, OCTOBER 20th
I will d e m o n s t r a t e t h e Y n n A u k c n
W i n t e r T o p for F o r d c a r s a t G r e g o r y ,
S a t u r d a y , October 20th.
Price # 7 5 0 0
cash; $»0.00 time.
Bestir Harford.
25
15c
5c
WANTS N A V A L
TRAINING UNIT
&>,-
• X
ALL ORDERS CASH
T"
•-rfc
*
I
maun*
T h e new r e v i s e d D e a n e s c h e d u l e of
fire i n s u r a n c e r a t e s w a s filed Inst w e e k
b y O. M. H e n r i , t h e g e n e r a ! m a n a g e r
of t h e M i c h i g a n
Inspection
Bureau,
a n d it w a s t e n t a v i e l y a c c e p t e d by 1>T . H a n d s , state insurance commissioner.
The new schedule reduces rates from
t e r e n t o t e n p e r c e n t , a n d it is estim a t e d will s a v e M i c h i g a n policy holder* ¢ 2 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 p e r a n n u m on the prese n t y e a r l y c o s t s of « 2 3 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 for p r e miums.
T h e tiling of t h i s s c h e d u j c a n d its
a c c e p t a n c e v i r t u a l l y m a r k s t h e final
s t e p s in the c a p i t u l a t i o n of t h e M i c h i gan Inspection Bureau
to t h e
state
c a m p a i g n of m o r e t h a n a y e a r , d u r i n g
w h i c h is w a s c h a r g e d t h a t the old
D e a n e s c h e d u l e u n d e r w h i c h the s t a t e
o p e r a t e d , w a s d i s c r i m i n a t o r y and t o o
high.
M r . H e n n , m a n a g e r of t h e b u r e a u ,
succeeds G e o r g e W . Cleveland, whose
jjolicy of fixing i n s u r a n c e r a t e s led to
c h a r g e s m a d e b y t h e s t a t e fire i n s u r a n c e d e p a r t m e n t t h a t in n i n n y i n s t a n c e s
t h e y w e r e d i s c r i m i n a t o r y a n d t o o high.
T h i s r e s u l t e d in t h e l e g i s l a t u r e p a s s i n g
a law p l a c i n g t h e p o w e r of all i n s u r a n c e n r t e s m t h e h a n d * o f t h e *t«4e.
C l e v e l a n d applied, under t h e new l a w ,
for a license aa r a t e r a n d m a n a g e r of
t h e b u r e a u hut w a s r e f u s e d by Mr.
H a n d s . T h e 1933 l e g i s l a t u r e enacted
a law to provide for t h e licensing of
all rating bureaus and fire raters, and
f u r t h e r s t i p u l a t e d t h a t no r a t e s fixed
by t h e Inspection b u r e a u s Khali b e c o m e
e f f e c t i v e until a p p r o v e d h y the (date
Tlir establishment of a nev.il training unit at the University of Michigan has been proposed in a letter to
President Marion L. Burton, from Captain Evans, U. S. X., of the Great
Lakes Naval Training Station. Such
an organisation exsited at Ann Arbor
daring the war, hut, unlike the Reserve Officers* Training Corps, has nut fire mmtaace department—Mtrh. Manufacturer and Financial Record.
been continued.
NOTICE
All owing ut an account kindly
call and settle tame at once, as
we have many bills now due that
we must pay at once.
'4
'V
,-i •
C. H. KEN
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
„'
„.
PINCKNEY DISPATCH
£1 Bachaa
THE LIGHT OF
WESTERN
M STARS
fv--
m
is the Most ValaaUe Asset Too Have
"^lewiCO. Mich.—''Some yean ago t
i f j i tafufakd with diwrincaa, palpita""" jlotaof appetite and tore and painnacn. I tried the best phy&jcians
hear of, and also several put-up
but nothing did me any
: physicians said it was my
* mrn^m, said it was my stomach:
I Other* said it was* my nerve*. I
" d I could mot work very steadl« friend came to see me and
my trying Dr. Pierce's
a Discovery. I was disIficd it anyway, and
„ .je ascend bottle I felt
r. ttietf^oaght six bottle*
' litetirv* tn* TXarovery' saved my
ft was rsrjstfnty n^med 'Golden
Discovery.' 1 would recom*
! to all who need such a medi»
£haa\ E. Backus.
AS druggists, tablets or liquid; or
tut 10c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel
, N. Y., fox a trial pkg.
If
CHAPTER XVII—Cont.nu«d.
—1^-
Stewart halted again. In the gloom
Madeline discerned a log cabin, and
beyond It ipear-pousted dark tree*
piercing the sky line. She could Just
make out Stewart's tall form aa he
leaned against hla horse. Either he
was listening or deflating what to do—
perhaps both. Presently be went Inside the cabin. Madeline heard the
scratching of a match; then she aaw a
faint light The cabin appeared to be
deserted. Probably It was one of the
many habitations belonging to prospectors and foresters who lived In the
mountains. Stewart came out again.
For a long moment he stood as still as
a statue and listened. Then she heard
Dim mutter, "If we have to Btart quick
I can ride bareback." With that he
took the saddle and blanket on* his
horse and carried them Into the cabin.
"Get off," he said, In a low voice, as
he stepped out of the door.
He helped her down and led her inside, where Hgain he struck a match.
Madeline caught a glimpse of a rude
fireplace and rough-hewn logs. Stewart's blanket and saddle lay en the
hard-packed earthen floor.
"Rest a little," he said. "I'm going
Into the woo.is a piece to listen. Gone
only a minute or so."
Madeline hnd to feel round In the
dark to locate the saddle and blnnket.
When she lay down It was with a
grateful sense of ease and relief. As
her body rested, however, her mind
became the old thronginz maze for
sensation jind thought. All dny she
had attended to Hie alert business of
helping her horse. Now, whnt had
already happened, the night, the BIlence, the proximity of Stewart and
his strnnire, stern canton, the possible happenings to her friends—nil
claimed their due share of her feeling. She could not sleep; she did not
try to.
Stewart's soft steps sounded outside. His d;irk form loomed In the
door. As he snt down Madeline henrd
the thump of a trun that he laid beside him on the sill: then the thump
of another ns he nut thnt down. too.
The sounds thrilled her. He turned
his ear to the wind and listened. MoMonies* he sat for what to her seemed
hours.
Then the stirring memory of the
day's adventure, the feeling of the
heanty of the night, and a strange,
deep-seated, sweetly vague consciousness of happiness portending, \ ere all
burned out In hot. pressing pnln at the
remembrance of Stewart's dlarrnce In
her eyes. Something had changed
within her so that what had been anger at herself was sorrow for him. He
was such a splendid man. She could
not feel The same: she knew her debt
to him, yet she could not thank him,
could not speak to him. She fought
an unintelligible bitterness.
Then she rested with cloned eyes,
and time seemed neither short nor
long. When Stewart called her she
opened her eyes to see the gray of
dawn. She rose nnd stepped outside.
Tha horses whinnied. Tn a moment
she was In the saddle, aware of
cramped muscles and a weariness of
llmhs. Stewart led off at a shnrp trot
Into the fir forest. They came to a
trail Into which he turned. The horses
traveled steadily: the descent grew
less steep; the flrs thinned cut; the
gray gloom brightened.
When Madeline rode out of the ore
the sun had arisen and the foothills
rolled beneath her; and at their edge,
where the gray of valley began, she
saw a dark patch that she knew was
th**ranch bouse.
Asthma
'emedy
f of A s t h m a and
your druggist for It.
dollar. Write for
lit Lyman Conine,Buffalo, N.Y.
^
BANISH Y O U R
^GOITER
Curt) Your Goiter
i m f o r t a b l y a t Home
of solttr hara been cured
not
Dwerfu
A: fraat
-. r air«r et iu MH U
l u•v»rrr
e r r po
form* la potoon. THYODINK
. _ «a*>Ubl« form of fodina, mild and
JkfM M P»t»rH that UM objw'tioiiahJa
1 « iodiiw i n allmlnatmi. It I. therefor*
to take Kottleof 40 tablets,|l;ra-
CHEMICAL COMPANY
sue.
f'tPM
Your Skin-Pores
Healthy
a Soap
st*.
WELL!
I'• Br* Water will
Lucky Dog*.
tad who la In the market
a dog. visited one of
the nusneawna kennels near the city recently. ^Almost simultaneously, as he
entered the yard, 38 dogs, ranging
from the grown-ups to pups, let loose
a wild barrel* °f barking, yapping
and whining. He picked the least
noisy of the dog* and left, but not before he had aaked: "What do yon
Iced all these animalsr "Well." the
| m t r of the kennels replied, "we feed
bjppn bread, meat, rice and milk. They
?|i0tt better food, I suppose, than some
''poor children, and more of It"
SWAMP-ROOT FOR
IEY AILMENTS
only eae medicine that really
_ .__ pre-eminent aa a medieine for
this slbnents of the kidneys, liver and
IV. Kilmer's Swamp-Boot itands the
Ingbsst for the reason that it haa prow*
*»~b» jnst the remedy Beaded in tbeasaada
" iwa—i*^ of Jiali awing eases.
.i-Boot makes friendi quickly baits mild and immediate effect is
asea realised is meet eases. It is a gentle. heaHag vegetable compound.
Start treatment at ones. Sold at aD
sVag stores in bottles of two sisea, medium
and large.
However, if yo* wish first to teat thia
Beat preparation seed tea eeata to Dr.
Kilmer 4 Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for s
s u n k bottle. When writing be tore and
thia paper.—Advertisement.
CHAPTER X V I I I
The Sheriff of El Cajon.
About the middle of the forenoon
of that day Madeline reached the
ranch. Her guests had all arrived
there late the night before, and wanted only her presence and the assurance of her well-being to consider the
last of the camping trip a rare advenIf yon can a policeman a lobster be ture. They reported an arduous ride
its likely to pinch you.
down the mountain, with only one Incident to lend excitement On the
About the only establishment that descent they had fallen In with Shertea money without advertising la iff Hawe and several of his deputies.
the mint
who were considerably under the Inffaence of drink and very greatly en• w g W B B
raged by the escape of the Mexican
girl Bonlta. Hawe bad used insultlag ianguage to the ladies and. acevrdlng to Ambrose, would have tnpoavenlenced the party on some pretest or other tf be twrd not been
sharp'* silenced by the cowboys.
ft. C O , Tolidm, Oasis
Madeline's guests were two days In
recovering from the hard ride. On
t.' V *
tha third day they leisurely b<«?«n to
prepare for departure. This period
was dotibly trying for Madeline. Her
slater and friends were kindly and
earnestly persistent In their entreaties
that she go hack Bast with them. She
desired to go. Tt was not going tha<
scattered; It was hew and when and
trader what circumstance* she was t«»
r*>it ronsed hi her disrtnrhrna?
[all's Catarrh
!UI
- "Is
r, mx 4i-itss.
P»'nr»
«h*
w*mi
V>«*
aba)
wanted to have fixed In mind her future relation to the ranch and the
West When the crucial hour arrived
she found that the West had not
claimed her yet These old friends
had warmed cold ties.
It turned out, however, that there
need be no hurry about making tha
decision. Madeline would have welcomed any excuse to procrastinate;
but as it happened, a letter from Alfred made her departure out of the
question for the present. He wrote
•hat his trip to California had been
very profitable, that he had a proposition for Madeline from a large cattle
company, and, particularly, that he
wanted to marry Florence soon after
his arrival home and would bring a
minister from Douglas for that purpose.
Madeline went so far, however, as
to promise Helen and ber friends thut
she would go East soon, at the very
latest by Thanksgiving.
With that
promise they were reluctantly content
to say goodby to the ranch and to her.
Helen's eyes had a sweet grave,
yet mocking light as she said: "Majesty, bring Stewart with you when you
come. He'll be the rage."
Madeline treated the remark with
the same merry lightness with which
It was received by the others; but
after the train had pulled out and she
was on her way home she remembered
Helen's words and looks with some
tiling almost amounting to a shock.
Any mention of Stewart, any thought
of him, displeased her.
"What did Helen meanT mused
Madeline. And she pondered. Thnt
mocking light In Helen's eyes had
tieen simply an ironical glint, a cynical gleam from thut worldly export
once so suspicious and tolerant In lt>
wisdom. The sweet gravity of Helen's
look had been a deeper and more subtle thing. Madeline wanted to under
stand it, to divine In It a new rela
tlon between Helen and herself, some
tiling fine nnd sisterly thnt might lead
to love. The thought, however, re
volvlng around a strange suggestion
of Stewart, was poisoned at Its Inception, and she dismissed It.
Upon the drive in to the ranch, as
she was passing the lower lake, shr>
saw Stewart walking listlessly alone
the shore. When he became aware
of the approach of the car he sudden
ly awakened from his aimless saunter
Ing and disappeared quickly in th«
shade of the shrubbery. This was not
by any means the first time Madeline
had seen him avoid a possible meeting
with her.
Somehow the act had
pained her, though affording her a
relief. She did not want to meet him
face to face.
It was annoying for her to guess
that Stlllwell had something to say In
Stewart's defense. The old cattleman
was evidently distressed.
Several
times he hnd tried to open a conversa
tlon with Madeline relating to Stew
art; she hnd evaded him until the last
time, when his persistence had brough'
a cold and final refusal to hear an
other word about the foreman. Stillwell had been crushed.
As days pnssed Stewart remained nt
the ranch without his old faithfulness
to his work. Madeline was not moved
to a kinder frame of mind to see him
wandering dejectedly around. It hurt
her. and because it hurt her she grew
all the harder.
A telegram from Douglas, heraldlne
the coming of Alfred and a minister,
put an end to Madeline's brooding, and
she shared something of Florence
Klngsley's excitement. The cowboys
were as eager and gossipy as girls.
It was arranged to have the wedding
ceremony performed In Madeline's
great hall-chamber, and the dinner In
the cool, finwer-scented pntio.
Alfred and his minister arrived a'
the ranch In the big white car. They
appeared considerably wind-blown. In
fart, the minister was breathless, almost sightless, and certainty hatless.
Alfred, used as he was to wind nnd
speed, remarked that he did not won
der at Nels aversion to riding a fleeting cannon-ball. The Imperturbable
Link took off his cap and goggles and,
consulting his watch, made his usual
apologetic report to Madeline, deploring the fact that a teamster and a few
stray cattle on the road had held him
down to the manana time of only a
mile a minute.
Arrangemenu for the wedding
brought Alfred's delighted approval.
When be had learned all Florence and
Madeline would tell him he expressed
a desire to have the cowhoyi attend;
and then be went on to talk about
California, where he was going to take
Florence on a abort trip.
On tba following day Alfred and
Florence were married.
Florence's
sister and several friends from El
Cajon were present, besides Madeline,
Stlllwell. and his men. It was Alfred's
express wish that 8tewart attend the
ceremony.
Madeline was amnaed
vhen she noticed the psdnfolly suppressed excitement at tha cowboys.
For them a wedding moat have bees
aa twirnrn%j »nd impraaatve event She
began to nave a oetter undertstanaia*
of the nature of It when they cast off
restraint and pressed forward to klaa
the bride.
in all her life Madeline
bad never seen a bride kissed so much
and so heartily, nor one so flushed
and disheveled and happy. Thia indeed was a Joyful occasion.
The dinner began quietly enough
with the cowboys divided between embarrassment and voracious api«tltett
that they evidently feared to Indulge.
Wine, however, loosened their toaguea,
and when Stlllwell got up to make the
speech everybody seemed to expect of
him they greeted him with a roar.
Stlllwell was now one huge, mountainous smile. He was so happy that
he appeared on the verge of tears. He
rambled on ecstatically till he came
to raise his glass.
"An" now, girls an' boys, let's all
drink to the bride an" groom ; to their
sincere an' lastln' love; to their happiness an' prosperity; to their good
health an' long life. Let's drink to
the unltln' of the East with the West
No man full of red blood an* the real
breath of life could resist a Western
girl an' a good boss an' God's free
hand—that open country out there.
So we claim Al Hammond, an' may
we be true to hlrn. An', friends, I
think it nttln' that we drink to his
sister an' to our hopes. Heah's to the
lady we hope to make our Majesty:
Heah's to the man who'll come ridln'
out of the West, a fine, big-hearted
man with a fast boss an' a strong
rope, an* may he win an' hold hex!
come, friends, drink."
A heavy pound of horses' hoofs and
a yell outside arrested Stlllwell's
voice and halted his hand In midair.
The patio became as silent as an
unoccupied room.
Through the open doors and windows of Madeline's chamber burst the
sounds of horses stamping to a halt,
then harsh speech of men, and a low
cry of a woman In pain.
Rapid steps crossed the porch, entered Madeline's room. Nels appeared
In the doorway. Madeline was surprised to re* that be had not been
at the dinner-table.
,She was disturbed at sight of his face,
"Stewart, you're wanted outdoors,"
railed Nels, bluntly.
"Monty, you
slope out here with me. You, Nick,
an' Still welt-—I reckon the rest of you
Ired better shut the dors an' stay inside."
Nels disappeared. Quick as a cat
Monty glided out.
Madeline heard
his soft, swift steps pass from her
room Into her otlice. Hfc had left his
_'iins there. Madeline trembled. She
saw Stewart get up quietly* and without any change of expression on his
dark, sad face leave the patio. Nick
Steele followed him. Stlllwell dropped
1 Ms wine-glass. As It broke, shivering
I the silence, his huge smile vanished.
His face set Into the old cnigginess
'ind the red slowly thickened Into
Mack. Stillwe'l went out and closed
f
he door behind him.
Then there was n. blank silence. The
onjoyment of the moment had been
rudely disrupted.
Madeline glanced
• iown fhe lines of brown faces to see
he pleasure fade Into the old familiar
hardness.
"What's wrong?" asked Alfred, rather stupidly. The change of mood had
been too rapid for hlrn. Suddenly
he awakened, thoroughly aroused at
die Interruption. "I'm going to see
who's butted In here to spoil our dinner," he said, and strode out.
He returned hefore any one at the
fable had spoken or moved, and now
'he dull red of anger mottled his forehead.
"It's the sheriff of El Cajon!" he
exclaimed,
contemptuously.
"Pat
Hawe with some of his touch dep-
Ho Was So Happy That Ha Appeared
oe the Verge of Tsars.
uties come to arrest Gene Stewart
They've got that poor little Mexican
girl out there tied on a horse. Confound that sheriff!"
Madeline calmly rose from the table,
eluding Florence's retreating hand,
and started for the door. The cowhoys jumped up. Alfred barred ber
progress,
"Alfred, T am going out" she said.
"No, I gueea not" bo replied.
"That's no place for yon.
Maybe
there'll be a fight. Too can do nothing. Too moat not go,"
"Perhaps I can prevent trouble,"
aba replied.
Aa she left the parJo she was aware
that Alfred, with Florence at his ade
and the cowboys behind, were starting to follow bar, When she got out
of her room upoa the porch she heard
several men la loud, angry dfaeoasloit.
Then, at sight of Bonlta helplessly
and enwlly beend mpon a
ana dmfcevetod and suffering. Hade
"Hawe, 111 M M B U •»
line experienced the thrill that sight act? fuaa," be said, aaawly,
or mention of this girl always gave take the ropes off that glrL"
her. It yielded to a hot pang in her
"Nope," replied tba sheriff. HSha
breast—that live pain which so got away from me onct Shes hawa>
shamed her. But almost instant!;, as tied now, an' she'll stay bawg-iled."
a second glance showed au agony In
Madeline thought she saw Stewart
Bonlta a face, her bruised anna where give a alight start But aa uaaccountthe rope bit deep Into the flesh, ber atola dlonew came ever uar eyea, al
little brown hands stained with blood, bfsaf Interval*, ebacuring bar keea
Madeline was overcome by pity for
the unfortunate girl and a woman's
sight let's hurry oat of here, righteous passion at such
wtwwart "You've mode annoy*
tri
enough. Ride down to the cor*
>dth me, I'll g«t my horae and gt
you."
fold on!" yelled Hawe, as Stewart
away. "Not so fast . Who's
this?*. You'll ride one of my
• horses, an' you'll go In Irons."
want to handcuff me7" queried
lart with sudden swift start a/
Ion.
jant to? Haw, bawl Nope, Stew*
jthet J eat my way with hoas>
raiders Greasers, murderera,
ich. See hyar, you Sneed, git off
it the irons on thia man.'*
guerrilla called Sneed slid off
korse and began ta> fumble in his
| e-bags.
llweil was gazing at Stewart in a
| of Imploring amaze,
ene, yon t i n t goin' to stand fat
handcuffs?" he pleaded.
," replied the cowboy. "Bill,
| friend, I'm an outsider aere,
>'a no call for Miss Hammond and
her brother and Florence to be
fed further about me,
Theli
day has already been spoiled
ly account I want to get ouJ
.*-J&:
'H
><**.
"From my long experience aa a noma
X do not hesitate to say that I eonv
alder Teniae Nature's most perfect
remedy," recently declared Mrs. t a,
Borden, 425 Pontius Ave-. Seattle*
Wash. Mrs. Borden LB a graduate of
the National Temperance Hospital,
Chicago, and her wide experience In
caring for the sick lends particular
emphasis to ber statement
"I have used Tanlac exclusively for
seven years In the treatment of my
charity patients," continued Mr* Borden, "and my experience haa been that,
for keeping the stomach, liver, kidneys
and bowela functioning property and
for toning up the system in general,
Tanlac has no equal Recently I had
a woman patient wbo could not even
keep water on ber stomach for fifteen
minutes. Six bottles of Teniae fixed
her up so she could eat absolutely anything. Another patient a man, seemed
unable to digest any food at <U. Three
bottles of Tanlac put him In such fine
shape he went back to work. These
two cases are typical. My confidence
to Tanlac la unlimited."
Tanlac is sold by all good druggists.
Take no substituted Over 40 million
bottles sold.—Advertisement
Willing to Miss a Few.
"After one gets older one beeetnat
calmer
In mind."
al, you might be too d—n cons)*
"What's
the idea?"
of Miss Hammond's sensitivi
"I've
got
to the point in life where
a" There was now ao trace «•
I have found that it's no disgrace not
to have read all the new books or
all the new play*"
Here It Is!
/M)L)1)S
KIDNfcX
PILLS
Qukk,SoTeRelkfFn>«iIG<li^an,
Bladder Trouble, Uriaary Trouble,
Backiche, ItteuTnaiigin, Neiinlfin.
Prompt relief or money back. Larsjsj
box 60c at your drug store, or direct
by mall, hut "TRY THE DRTJn)
STORE FIRST."
Dodd'i MedidM Co^ Buffalo, N. Y .
A Mild
Lnxal
Gensr tha Moaned,
M t l I So Seek"
»Kei|
rteous, kindly old noeaer. Hi
harder than stone. "How about
lin's? I want to know If you're
o let this aneakin' coyote, this
sp of the old ruin-guzzliB'
r sheriffs, put you In Irons an1
ie you an' drive you off to JaliF
replied Stewart, steadily.
by Gawdt You. Gene Stew»
Wbafs come over you? Why,
In the house, an' I'll 'tend t«
?Iler. Then tenwrow you cea
an' give yourself up like •
an."
I'll go. Thank*. Bill, for tht
u and the boys would stick ts
urry, Hawe, before my mind
way. You're afraid to go near the
border. An' your hate of Gene Stewart makes you want to hound him an'
put him where he's never been yet—
In Jail. You want to spite his friend*.
Wal, listen, you lean-jawed, skunkbitten coyote! Go ahead an' try to
arrest hlrn!"
Stlllwell took one mighty stride off
the porch. His last words had been
cold. His rage appeared to have been
transferred to Hawe.
The sheriff
had begun to stutter and shake s
lanky red hand at the cattleman when
Stewart stepped out
"Here, you fellows, give me a
chance to say a word."
As Stewart appeared the Mexican
girl suddenly seemed vitallxed out of
her stupor. She strained st her bonds.
as if to lift ber hands beseechingly.
A flush animated her haggard face,
and her big eyes lighted.
"Senor GeneT she moaned. "Help
met I an seek. They beat me, rope
me. •moa" keel me. On, help me, Sesor
GeneP
-Shut up, er m gag you." said the
man who held Bonita's horse.
"Mnsale her. Sneed, if aba blabs
again." called Hawe
Madeline felt something tense and
strained working In the short silence.
Was It only s phase of ber thrilling
excitement? Her swift tisnee showed
the faces of Nets and Monty and Vict
to be brooding, cold, watchful
She
wondered why Stewart did no* Vmk
toward Bonlta.
He. roe, was now
dark-Paced, cool, e/mwt, wtth
bur
'/.v
„*r>
NURSE FINDS«
PERFECT REMEDY
*v» ,."
voice broke at last, betraying
iderful control he bad kept ovet
ions. As he ceased speaking N
suddenly to become spirit I es*.
•ped his head.
the man Sneed cense forward,
the iron fetter*, Madeline's
turned to fire. She would hav*
Stewart then for lapsing ints
id of cowboy it had bnen be!
sickly sentiment *o ahbor
iiu a man'a West—a man's gam*
moment with her blood hot and
she would have glorWd lu tha
which aba had «o deplored:
IfOttld bava welcomed tha action
that kjad eharacterited Stewart's treatment^ef Don Carlos; she had la bee
tba sadden dawning temper of a worn
an who bad been assimilating UM lift
and aUrtare around ber and wbo would
not f j v e turned her eyea away from
* barah and bloody deed.
Bng Stewart hetd forth his hands ta
b* manacled. Then Madeline be*t«JJ
her own voice burst ont In a ringing,
imperious "Walt l"
Sneed dropped the roanarle*. Stew
art's face took on a chalky whltetes*
Hawe, In a slow, stupid ambarrasa
ment beyond his cob'.rui, removed hli
Romhrero In s respect that seemed
wredebed from bim.
"Mr. Htwe, I can prove t» you thai
Stewart wa« not concerned In nay way
whsAWer wltn the crime for wL*ch yoe
want to arrest bim."
The sheriff's s u r e underwent a bUzun
big change. He coughed, stammered*
and tried to speak. Manifestly, be had
been thrown completely off hla ba»
men.
Astonishment aioarty
Into discomfiture.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Similar Wanda Differ in T<
Osage orange and black totast ava
much alike in structure, strength,
durability and color, although the fee
mer usually haa mora of a geldat
brownish tinge. These twn woods e s t
readily be distinguished by the fanl
that osage orange give* off a yetlenlan
color If wrapped tn a ws<
placed on a soaked Mottsr. while
locust gives off practtenlbj as
OIAHQST,
Never
Qrinw
Soldiers' Insurance Problem.
Several hundred men In the army
and navy of the United States In the
World war named as their beneficiaries
for government Insurance their parens living In Russia, The veterans'
bureau cannot pay this Insurance, oe*
cause we have not the necessary machinery in Russia which would be eonntcted with consular service tn that
state. It is presumed that the families of these soldiers who have died
for their country are In a bad way hi
soviet Russia.
.
Sure Relief
FOR INMGESnON
. . BKUiANS
Hot water
ELL-ANS
FOLEY'S
HONEY TAR
{ STABUSMf D 1875
RFFUSt
SUBSTlTUTfcS
Farming Adapted Fall or Winter Best
Time to Fight Borer
to Given Region
In Making Change Physical Canes Infested Should Be
Cut Before Bugs Emerge.
Factors Such as Soil and
Climate Are Important
(Praparad k; t h * V o l t e * S U l e a Department
if
(lTapar** h> l»a (Jaitea A*i«a Departotaat
•I A«rtc»U*r«,)
For One.
The speaker waxed eloquent snd,
after hit peroration on women's rights,
he said : "When they take oar girls, at
they threaten, away from the eo-edoeatlonal college, what will follow)
What will follow, I repeat r
And a loud masculine voice in the
audience replied, "I wiiL*
Much Ammunition Destroyed,
During the last three years 500,000
His of ammunition from Britain.
America, Belgium, Germany and Rnsd a have been broken up In Prance,
a.
'
'
Re-roofing
Raises Value
A
NEW roof of beautiful lasting
colors—a fire-resisting root
that can not rust, crack nor
tot — a roof that lasts will add
greatly to the Talue of your home
or other buildings.
Look over your old roofs and then
call at your lumber yard and sea
J^inthrop
Tapered Asphalt
' Shingles
Tbeir taper is their distinction
and their superiority. The heavy
butts of everlasting asphalt hug
the roof in any weather. They
double the wearing thickness of
your roof. Made in Michigan for
Michigan weather.
Sold only through retail lumber*
men, but we will send yon a aan>
pie upon request.
Beckman-Dawson
Roofing Company
14217 Moaniar Road
Mithtf •
To stick to cotton or to change to
c o m and hogs, to grow wheat and oats
or to go into dairying, or to chaugv to
amy oilier type of fanning which may
ui the u m » seem to offer more profitable returns than the prevailing type,
is a question ever present Lu great
farming regions, s a d one wbicu is
often keenly considered -in tiuie of agrtcuitural depression.
ID attempting
to make such changes serious errors
are almost certain to be made, any*
the United States Department of Agriculture, onioss those "who are directing the movement have u thorough understanding of the forces which control
the types of farming adapted to the
different regions.
Enterprise* Beat Adapted.
It is possible, at leas; in a general
way, says the department, to determine what farm enterprises are adapted to a region by studying the physical, biological, and ecououiic conditions
prevailing there, and the adaptability
of various enterprises to these conditions. An analysis of the types of
farming in the United States has been
made on this basis and the discussion
is presented In Farmers" Bulletin No.
125®, Distribution of Types of Farming in the United States, Just issued by
the United States Department of Agriculture.
Physical factors such as soli and
climatic conditions play an Important
part In the type of farming adaptable
to a given region. Temperature limits
the northern distribution of cotton,
southern distribution of wheat, and
northern distribution of corn. Rainfall
and length of growing season are other
important factors the effects of which
are very apparent in our agriculture.
Factors of Sacond Class.
The second class of factors discussed
In the bulletin Is culled biological factors. The effect of the boll weevil in
reducing cotton acreage near in*' tiulf
and Atlantic coasts is un example. The
chinch bug has. .reduced the acreage of
corn In southern Illinois, and the Hessian fly has changed the date of s e e ing winter wheat and has nrohtibly reduced the acreage of this crop in
some localities. Many other cuses are
cited ID which Insect pests and fungous
diseases are determining factors.
In the third class are economic factors, such as-cost of transportation and
distance from market.
Another important one Is competition wiih regions
which can produce more chea ,»ly. This
last is a factor in limiting th > acreage
of corn, oats, wheat, barley, and rye
la those parts of New England where
these crops thrive.
The bulletin alms to make clear the
part these fundamental fac ors playIn determining the possibility of establishing on a profitable basis la new or
different type of farming, an« to show
that the kind of farming w W h prevails is based on them, rather than on
the desires or whims of tbe ! farmers.
A copy of the bulletin may be secured
from the United States Department of
Agriculture, Washington, D. C}., as long
as the supply lasts.
Internal Freezing Does
Much Harm to Potatoes
Imported Instruments
At M#lcu»wusfy Law Prtcas
wm£ msTaucnoN^aooK
ta aata » aav aa
Internal freesing Injury, or frost necrosis, oeeurs whet* potatoes are exposed to severe frost*, temperatures
below twenty-eight degrees Fahrenh e i t The tubers show dark blotches
In the flesh when they are cut open
and allowed to stand a short timel
The spots are usually most (narked at
the stem end, but they are scattered
Irregularly through the outer flesh or
m a fine network or ring. Ordinarily
tba Injury Is detected only upon cottine, although the affected tubers wilt
•tore than the normal ones in storage.
Potatoes may actually be frosea
solid throughout, becoming soft and
mushy on thawing.
As a result of
coming in contact with a cold wall in
storage; or being left above the ground
before digging, potatoes may freeze on
one side. Tubers Injured in this way
are easily sorted o u t
"Turning sweet" is due to prolonged
storage at low temperatures, twentynine to thirty-four degrees Fahrenheit.
not to real freesing. Tubers that have
never been frost bitten may show this
Injury.
Have a good thermometer hi the
room where potatoes are stored and
keep the temperature above twentyeight degrees Fahrenheit
When shipping potatoes during cold
weather tn a heated car, provide for
some drculstJoa of air from the stOT*
to pretest black heart la th* potatoes near the heat and frost Injury la
those In the ooter parts of the car.
aartrallar*. j
Fall or wluler 1» the best time to
apply control measures to raspberry,
blackberry or dewberry crops infeued
by the red-necked rasplierry runeborer, according to Farmers' Bull-tin
IIS*, by F. H. Chittenden. enton-*dogist. The damage to these crop* Is
caused by a flat-headed, rullfc-uhlie
borer, which Is the larva of a small,
slender, velvet-black beetle with cop
pery red or golden thorax ("ne«k").
The larvae form Irregular swellings or
gulls, which gradually enlarge th*
canes and split the bark. Canes thus
Infested die, or become weakened and
fail to develop a crop. The beetle also
does some injury by feeding on the
leaves of the plants.
To control the Insect the infested
canes shoukl be cut out in the fall or
winter, or in the early spring befivre
the beetles have emerged from them.
All cuttings should
be promptly
burned. To insure thoroughness, all
wild blackberry, raspberry or dewberry plants nearby should receive the
same attention. Co-operation among
neighboring fruit growers in the observance of these measures for successive years Is highly desirable.
Farmers' Bulletin 1:2» may be obtained by applying to the United
States Department of Agriculture,
Washington.
Scab Seriously Reduces
Yield of Wheat Crop
Scab seriously reduce* the yield of
wheat In infected fields throughout the
central states and eastward. And It
not only affects wheat, hut other grains
and grasses as well. The cause of
this disease is a tiny fungous parasite,
which grows hi the wheat plant a little like the wheat plant Itself grows In
the soil, and this parasite destroys the
parts of the wheat plant in which it
grows.
The same parasite also grows on
corn, and naturally wheat following
corn may he seriously affected by scab.
In order to control the disease the
I'nited States Ikepnrtment °f Agriculture recommends that the farmer—
(1) Avoid sowing wheat after corn"
unless the cornstalks are removed ami
the stubble completely plowed under.
CJ) Plow under all crop refuse and
clean up tlie old straw and grasses
along the fence rows and in nearby
waste places.
(8) Use clean seed of adapted varieties.
Seed should be thoroughly
cleaned, graded and treated.
(4) Sow wheat when the ground la
cool, winter wheat on the latest date
In the fall, and spring wheat on ths
earliest safe date In the spring.
If you are interested In making a
more thorough study of the scan problem write to the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington. D
C. and ask for Farmers' Bulletin 1224
JVheat Scab and Its Controt
Many Injurious Insect
Pests May Be Destroyed
Since many troublesome Insects hi
herniate In dead plants and trash and
in grass and weeds along the borders
of cultivated land, H. A. Qossard, entomologist of the Ohio experiment
station, states that large numbers of
them may be destroyed in late rail or
very early spring by horning the collected trash and dead grass.
Tarnished plant bugs, squash bugs,
and slugs are cited as examples.
These pests pass the winter In weedy
borders, among refuse, under stones
and other objects. They could be almost entirely eliminated If entire communities would co-operate in removing all means for their protection during winter.
Potato stalks, squash vines, onion
tops, asparagus plants, bean and pea
vines, and the Ilka furnish shelter
during the winter for many Insects
that feed upon these plants.
Fall plowing, where soil conditions
permit the practice, will result ia the
destruction of many cutworms, white
grubs, corn ear worms, army worms,
and eggs of the grasshopper, where
these pests are numerous.—Weekly
Press Bulletin. Ohio experiment
tlon.
Too Much Moisture Will
Cause Potatoes to Decay
An excess of moisture will cause
the growth of decay m the potato
storage. Some growers make a practice of -curing** their potatoes before
storing. This is done by piling theai
In piles of 30 bushels or more, aad caverlag theso with the potato vines. After the potatoes are well dried s o there
Is ao excess malataie, aad a n free
S . l i
from dirt, they may be placed la storage. Sometimes t h * ventilators of
th* storage are left opea for severs)
> swansaaaassasatasr i w i l a i i l j n
are eleven standard breeds days after storage to facilitate dryof docks wsdeh have b e e s admitted to lac. Care sboaM be used, however,
the Americaa staadard of perfection, that potatoes ta storage do aot bebreeds a a y be divided lato come too dry. as they assy wilt ar
lasses: (1) The meat ctasa. tn- shrtveL
cradtae the Pakta, Ayiaabnry. Muscovy,
Han an, Cayaaa, Batf aad Swedish; (3)
the « | g Haas, ia|MSstaled by the Rmv
(S) the arasmeata] ctaaa.
of t h * Call, th* Created
It ten
i White aad the Black Bast tadta. The Biara ta
BaTaarOwaWetoMrlba
Ducks Kept on Average
Farms of Mixed Breeds
Right Place to Select
Seed Cora Is in Field
l t » a i II 11,11
Tall in* an Alienator** Ago.
The width of an alligators a* we between hla eye teeth is the means for
determining the reptile's age. according to the experts on such subjects.
After the reptile is ten feet long the
oose widens une-quarter of ao inch for
each 50 years the alligator Uvea. (Vfclawaha. the largest alllgutor in captiv- I
Ity, weighs 1,-kV pounds and is l.V* »
feet long. He Is estimated to be set- I
eral hundred years old.
{
MARKETS
U v * Stock and Maata
CkNUng C*tiica«M price*
Hog*, top,
» IS. Hulk of *«lea V H»%J* *•«• medium
*IM1 rood beef s i n m IA ^>* U U<, lmloh«-r
."M»TI and hrlfrra VJii'Oll feeder ataar*
}4SQtt»:&; lig-M and mt-dium wt vea!
oaivea l*&u«12 7&
f.,t U n i t * i l l 75.«
15 75. fet-din* laml* | U 7,*>U 1J ii<. >*ar15. vmU » 1 5 0 ! : .
Urol. 1 2 2 * » ^ .
u.uU-li
t H t j l i . U|fh( pu.ri, .i»in« »5*««:*«, L»\»\>
tu:na tla*j£<l
.
Fruit* «n« V«s*t*oi*a
!
!
Bread making
is easy to learn
and is in itself
an education in
other cxK)king.
WOMEN CAN DYE ANY
GARMENT, DRAPERY
iingn evT&a-u.^u. r*i r * e * ss;:.«7 o n l ine prleea gy+ni gr.«df meal* llerf |16*< I
IxJJijr IsAnrnl < i r w n M n u r u m !\>t.,tiw->
NVw Yv>rk. * i «<Mi; >« s»i-*««d :»nd huik
(*-r I W - l b a . I'hIUdttllihU «1 >i.l«t<iJT"
N ' u r t h r m Uitund Whil<->« '.n < hi<vtsv> M (
$ l * J l l i . ahlptting p u i l i d J K ^ v t l ^ Lil>l*Mtf N e w Vi.rk [V^Jilsh T \ IK- J2>*l3»' HI
N > w York
hJ.«Mrrn A p » ' l w Y o i k
ln»IwriaO* W t i l S c per bbl in S > w Y « i h j n J
JuitAtlULiia a l S4 5<> In l l t i U d e p b ^
*%ast Foam
3ye ar Tint
Worn, Fad**
N e w for IS Cents.
&
!
'•e^I
I
Direction* for Maklns Coffes,
Several iiunlen* in. the Canadian
woods had so enjoye<l the coffee ranle '
May
by their guide that when the trip was
Quoted LVtv>*H«r U> V> I tiimMhv S i w
1
York » 1 ; rutshu-ic J2vi»'; MempM* t25. over they asked for the recipe.
"Ver" easy," be said.
"IVre Mn !
I'SnclnnaJI %3i, 1. hu-«j:o |2T. Mmne«(*.tUa
9 » : St. I*JUIS » < :
K u » n <1ty
|1T 5«; only one way make coffee.
Take trip i
-S\k. 1 prairie Kaiiana Cltv | H T5. Chlo»gu
Into
voods,
build
Ore
vid
pitch
pine j
*2\). >llnne«vpoil9 fli.&«>. Su Louis |3L
knot*,
put
von
quart
water
and
two j
Dairy Predwcts
handful coffee in pol, an' sit on cover i
WholetnUe price* of J2 i«rT>re ttxtay:
N e w Yorfc «7 l-2c; CMca«x» 4« I-2c; Ph.Hn- j ao she no i n boil over. Yen cor^r I
deJphla « 1-Sr. Kodlon 47c.
Wholesale get too rutt five seat of pantii. coffee j
prleea at Wte^xinajn Prtin*r>- auu-fceU. she done,"
(.>c4uber 10: Twin* 24 l-4o; ulngle daJales
2Sc; double daialea 3& S-4c; y«uiur Ameroaa 2S S-4c; kuifhorai 25 l - 2 c .
a^uar*
>rlr>ta 2< l-2c.
Cuticura Comforts Baby's Skis
When red, rough snd Itching, by hot
baths of Cntlcnra Soap and touches of
Cut leu ra Ointment.
Also make use
now and then of that exquisitely scent
ed dusting powder, Cutfcum Talcum,
one of the indispensable Oitlcura
Toilet Trio.—Advert I sement.
DETROIT QUOTATIONS
fATTIJi—Good
to cholee yeartlryr*.
t l O t f l l ; beat h*nvy uteer*. $S2it»!> be.st
h«Ady wt. butcher ateem. tTO" *i. m'.xed
•teera and heifer*. I&.&fl*t: hxndv ll*hl
butcher*. f4S0*& llirht butcher*. | 3 &<>*
ITS; beat «iw», (&*&.&<>. butrher <-<<»»,
U M Q l ; cutler*. S2.!>a«3: rjnnrra. U t t
L U ; choice ilgtat bull*. U « » i . 2 i . boiuca*
bull*. H M«rS.tt
st^>ck r.u!>. 14 6»>* *
feeder*, $4.&0*C: Xocker*. »4t»*. milker*
and springer*. t4S%ilOU.
OAI.VKS— Real rrailed. l!4|rl4M>. f»lr »
to good. $ll4tl2&«). cull* and common, i
»S|fliV,V>:1 heavv irnukeer*. tlKfl(r«
.
SHKK1
ANt» I.A.MIIS-|U»5t
lan\»w 1
$1J.S0«7 11 TS. fj*lr l*mtv<. »US(.<»11. l'«hl
10 <xwnru»»n tan>bs, fst» 11. f»lr to jt>«->l '
sheep. $SI»7; ouIN *n<\ <^*mr»wrv. t i f i S
H( K;S—Minetl hoc*. »v Jf, h e * w j : Ti
*»v 25; rough*. •<«<». \orkrn'. • > ! » . (> **.
*:.So .«i*irv. $4US
l.IVK l « o n . T K V - F a n c y cok>re<1 »|>rlnir
chicken*. 2 ltm ujv I2r. mr<liiim opr!t\K
S l t f t l o . l»-«horn sprinir*. I^U IV'. hrn«.
i Itva ujv 2*«-. medium h»-n*. !»«»jic. li«-
Girls Sea* U. S, Husbanda
In Srtlda. Syria. tXX^ beautiful an>1
nnmarrlex] girls pine for husband*
There are ni»nc in Saiila. Sadly they
gnxe aenws the Me»literraneao !*n<l
sljth for t h e Tnileil S l a t e s T h e
<jU'»la
Is
full
|V>pi»nMely
mined, t h e c i r l s would NMI
tlir»H v mile
lin\lt
anil
invite
m o m a l l y inolln»>t| A m e r i c a n * to
thejr l i h d e s .
T h i s sutce>ti'<n
to h a \ c reached tlie Near ll:ist
Syrian
deterto the
matt i-ho.»<«>
I* «aid
relief.
h o r n s . 1 & b l » c . n n w l f r s , 1 T>c. g r e w . lc>*» '
K o , d u c k s . & lbs *nil uiv 22(r-^<.. »nvaJ>r |
U U 2 \ x p e r lb
Ouch!
The widower h.ut made hl« proposal
Buttae and Egg*
and was awallinc tlie rt^ply llauthtilj
HI'TTKR-llwn
cre«mery.
'n
tub*
•he anvse. and H\ing him with a stern
43 1-IwlSc per !h
Rlir.S—Fr**h current rec^'pt*. SJWSlc
glance *he esHainiett:
"I couldn't
candled Orat*. J44»J«<. alorxce. :>(|31c niarrr a widower; the very Idea"
per do*.
thatch me walking In another woman'a
Fartw SVo^wcta
shoes T Then the light of triumph
APrl.KS—Know tHfl»
Mrln«o*h red
"Madam.'' he
tt*2 3S. Wolf River tl S«* I 75
Alex- gleamed In his eye*.
ander. 1 1 1 4 * 1 TS. Wemlthv. t l & o a i T t . returned. "I had no Intention of offer
t.^ulver. t l M « i ; & . (ireentne. ll&OtflT*
Ing yon raj late wife a ahi>ea- you
per bu
CR.\NBKRKlBa—Rart> Mack. %i p*r couldnt get them 00 P
Northwestern
1730 North,
SHINQIi
^
^
AMERICAS HOME 5H0E POLISH
A
Black • Tan . Wfcit* . Ox-BJood . Brawm
Qsick aad ««•* h> mm.
8HINOLA HOME SET
E-y
awaak
DETROIT- GOING
I V t n u i 1*
r->"**
• k ' a d la >.:>«»ih »n<l M a w a e a a A
a l h e r n : x in A m r i i < * i>Mia«
I rr pi <-»»«< t 1 1.. K l i x h U i T l l S - a l K>t»t<- »'cM»ifv.Rj
lVlra.il,
*n<t tx-»i IJr«i K»i«i*. r i m i in thr »t«i<«<• l « M i ' the 11 aat
et tbelr ! , « > M M I ann.Mnc ant] n>e«h»>iU
I » » r l • He*. TTii*hi» r»rre»*ai»t»»» 1« »very tow* ih
\ \ » h«v» m«n< U K M I cn.i s«l*» Ajtn<t» t h i x u t h » a t T h* atale
h « R 4 - . r i r i.r-.ni» .<n | V i i « l l Real K»i»t»- with jaet k t*m dellara
•in* ' i-ii.Mhn ).«>!. ( rn!« li* »h» o p a x i r l i a n y flt a lifetime
Thr I.-,, j h..n<- r . i - i | 4 t i »»J t*»tr\<lt enciaeera ar* plaaalMC
re
t IT
l<
4 t a T lakal.
CKUBRT—Kaiamaamv 3&«3Sc r»r d«*
Vsaatasaa*
!
Carrata t l « l 3* per hu. he«-t». | l V I
l . t t per bu; turnip*, tl SS>«1 W> per bu.
rnui»J rvdlahaa. Si 7 ( a 2 per bu. niriv !
parater. •»•>***• P*t *>«- g»e»w pepper*. 1
f i t ? ! tS par bu; bo*»*4 aplnarh. S3, w a s ,
a a d g n a w b e a m . SjayUSS par bu. rr^en
oaS>ns, U V f l l . i l par doa. c a u H n o w r CI •
t l M per hu; ,ecspta»L I l i S u i r s r"" I
bu. cucumber*, hothouse. S S a z t S |w-r
do* for rancr. S3.WSJ1IS for extra fancv .
rutabaga*. 31 « 1 3 3 per bu. Hubbard
aqwaah. 110)1.3« per bu.
QraiN
WHRAT—Taah No. 1 red. $1 l i hid; V->
J red. SI IS; N o 3 red. tl 1J; No. J w h t e .
$11C; N«L 3 mixed, tl 14
TKI-LOW iXiRN—Oaah No. 3. $1 12.
No. I. 11.11.
W H 1 T B OATS—^-^ah N<v 3, aSr No 3,
«1-Se.
RTB—C**h N A r TVRILXNS—Immediate and prompt ahlpaaenc t&SS per c a t .
RARLJIT—Mailing. Tic; feedin*. f f
B m C * H K A T — New mllUns rra-*n.
tl.TS par can.
8 E K D S — Prime red ri*v+r,
»14 2i,
March, Ht-M; alaike. gIS3S.
tlm-Oy.
nsrnre of th«s» who could writs, as
well sa to stand In the place of the
signature of those woo could aot writ*.
—Detroit News.
A man usually gets what be desertes
in the end, but he manage* to get s
lot at other thins* in the sseamlme.
la
foe
>,r>« ,-r .1 > ;*r» »•«• I « : M te« «<• n r r ^ \ *»r an tb» a i l v a a c * a* R w u
w ,.„ ^ .
,,,.1 i>»,-oii h«» i\»fi »t»rt»-.t
. u » > v 1 »^»••<• 'w 1 h>« ll»r^T«t wt Weal! h ? l*et wfte M w a ^av
• r tM
Will'
| . m ' 1, u • * » »
«.M» W
• 1« r i r a r e e
nkME.
DtTW*ea Mi
»»ea»»
^
SHIP FOUND ON BIG I
Absolutely Honest
Hoi>. n
I 1 r.rtr i i t »
\\
I '! ..11 :.'•< r^
,f I ! , e l l l i x i . v n
« l»«»>
pirl
v l \ I'l
li:«\ C 11
ilr
hlni fumnus, s.ild at a illnner p.triy
\:i tils' N i « York h o m e :
T'..' m.Miern cirl has m a n \ f a u ' t s
V.ill al le;tv| v(w> U op«>n <n-l ahovr
tv^ard
Tlcr<^ s n.'tli.iig of the d>>c»4trul |>uss ab.»ut her
"i>n a m.K>nlc'it winter nlpht In
Klortda a tmxlern y » u n c man pa«*1«»s
ately k i s s e l a »M»j»uttful tu«»dern girl
under a |\*lm tree.
"'I'll he frank with yon,' the youag
man said after the e m b r a c e w a s ox-rr.
box
1
CRAItAPt'l.ES — Ulchlswn. 11 W%»1 Tl ;
• \ o u ' r e m>t the first girl I've e r e r
A Oiffsrsnca,
per bu*h*t.
PKARS—Barllelt. »4; tnjche**. »2 b*fv
T t o w long la It color, tn take to get Hvsed, hy a l « n c sluM.*
ITS; Keefer. tl T&4f J per hu
"She lit a h u e e and costly < tga *e'te.
tlRAPKS— Mlchlcan i V n c o r d * »1 » * • through with this r**+r~ aaaed the
" ' A n d I'll be equally frank w i t h
140 per bu. I*-lb baaket*. T&«.~a* 11. 4 lb client, who was under tnsplHoa at
baaketa 344)fttc
vou,"
she answen-d
'YonS-e gt»t a
"Well." replied ih*
PKA^HRS—Near York Klberta*. U U « housebreaking.
creat
deal
to
Vearta
e
v
e
n at that."*—
3.M per bu.
jroang lawyer, thoughtfully, -ItTI t s s e
g t T N O K S —U » « I W per bu
New
York
Mall,
me about two wees a to get through
H O N K T - O W n h . 23«3&r per lb
OARltAGK—Home i r o w n , 11*1 2i per with It. bat Tat afraid \V% g\>lng to
buahaL
O l s c s v s r y of Amertca Cost $7,000.
lake you a boot four years.**—<.}i
POPCORN—Utile Huater. : | . t % J c per
Afler a s»>arrhinc Inquiry. >t h a s
Baglb. common, 4 1-44)4 I J c per lb
been esettmale^l that It cost JT.2.V> ^»r
POTATOES—itlchla*n. «3*1.40 per IM I
lb sack.
t^hrlstoplter
t'oluinr.ua
to
discover
O R K S S E n CAl.VKS — Heat count nr
W h e n AM S i g n e d W i t h C
America.
T
h
e
e
x
p
l
o
r
e
r
w
a
s
paid
about
draaraad. lt©17c per lb; ardlnarv r^*dca
In olden ttmes t h e s i g n a t u r e of t h e
lafrlTc. Hty dreaaed. U « I V per )h
$X.t\
I«ouls S a n ' a n g H . a nt»h|enian,
cross, now m a d e by persona w h o a r e '
LKTTVOE—«*S>TSc per bu. hotho<i«e
l l # l IS per la-lb baaket. Iceberg. Utf unable t o w r i t e , w a s not confined to 1 and s o t 4Jueen Isjiln-lla of Sjvaln. proISO per cajta
vided most of the u o n e y to outfit t h e
^,
...
.,
ONIONS—Miohlgan »5*4]?3-TJ per I1V1 t h e Illiterate Has*. A m o n g the S a i g a s . v
v * - , . P * »# i k . - . ~ — . J T « . * » _ . . < . » three s h i p * and pay the sailors. wr>*
lb aack. Rpanlaa. > 3 « 3 b « per cr%4». .the
mars
of
the
crows,
as
aa
attcwtatKm
'
..*.»_.
___
.^
.
, _,^
white plckl'n*. S3 per bu.
were s e e k i n g a n e w route to Asia,
TOMATOBS — H<Xbou»e. SI T&tl S per of good faith of the pec***) signing, s a y s t h e Investigator.
The Plnxou*.
la-lb haaket
w s s required to be attached to the stg
who c o m m a n d e d t w o of the s h i p s , w e r e
SWKKT POTATORS—VlrrlnUv. W T5,«t
Captsin rf Staamar Sights
tf les Cacrjrlna
frr SBal aaahaxtaT
^a^a^avaaa^aaa:«
Ifor centorles mystery
willed the seas, guided oatf %|t^
winds of cbaace- Oae a*
found hy s steatuer e a |
the Horn receatly. While
way Into the
Ice carry-tat
wrbootwr.
Hefts, was
to find t h e
them waa
ttagedy waa a
list of those
i;reenrand whaler
looting derelict, battered
worn, apparently built ta
tury aad Ice-hoaad far
ing crew found la the
of s young won*
Arctic frosta. Near a
was the remains of a
holding s (Hat s a d
c h a a k i llagastaa.
rt Is
TW»d.** said the
was thinking of
world, "whadda ;
en boldness for m e t *
-WcH." said the
\ paid $1.10 each, and a common sea,man
got J 3 for t h e voyage, -popular ale- •on.
It costs s kit to rsad
rhsnles llag»tine.
rott ever start waiag
broke."
Owners of yachts snd aotomhllea
Many a good t e a t f *
ought to be ab>e to run Into tel.t fsater
oat by s
than s f*nn ^ b " n "« to wslfc
QA Simple Guide to
Propier Food Selection
Nourishment— Grape-Nut* with crtmm or good milk ^*r*^ta^sif
HTS
Oas far rto^da Paaawt rotmd.
Wast Paha Beach. Fla.—PeaaoU
grow* ia tan ranch, or peat aoU of the
Florida a^raralades lacked a market
sajaal ta taa volame of arodactlne beeaaaa taa* were "too soft."
Now
taa "saltaass" has been found to ba a
saatrtt. Taa aats da aot roast well
s s c a a s a of taa high percentage of
aO. a r fata, thay eoataia bat the aoaaaaalaa af aaasaaDy lartre oO coataat
saakaa taaaa daatraala for the oU
Srmsea wfU aa aaad ia a cookfag
<
imondDyes.
;
future price*: Chkwf> l»r<-eitib»T whe^t
l l . W l - S . l^k-*jro O e v r m t w <x>n» T* 5-Si .
Mlnn«stpoJi8 r>«H>«rob^r wh«-*t Si IN I - *. 1
Kanaaui Oily HwYmher whrat tl i<< T-i.
Wlttnlpeg U w t m b r i whrmt >i J-,Vv.
Kast BvSfaaa Lb*« Stack
KAST Bt'FFAljtV-OattJe Slow Ho*-*
Steady, heavy and .rocker*
P « n : A
pla-a. IS-SSaitaa. Saeep
Slnutc
t.>p
taaab*. t l 4 K a > 1 4 M . yearfaar*. S l * * l l .
wetherw. t « « t . M awe*. SCVT n . Carte*.
HJv
'
Send /or frte booklet
•The Art o/ Baking Bread'
TVin*t wonder whether yon can dye
w
tint suiT-essfully, be^-ause perftvt 1
Grain
home dyeing is puarantefd with "Pla- '
< kvsli)( |irl<t«a lit t'hjciis'o <^*h XlArkrt
N'J. 2 rt-d winter «tht«l $1 U . X.i 2 h*r\l mood I>>-es** eveo if you have nev.T i
winter « h « a i tl IS. No : nu».t-d ^1:11 iyed before. Druggists have all colors, i
11.12. NV 2 y«sll««r ™m t l . U . No J wh:;«u t U ***•-. Avrrn*r ! w m prlcv."' Ni> 2 Directions In each package.—Ad\-er- j
mixed rocn In Centra! Iow»i s»5k\ t'U»il:>(r , tlseme&t.
1
HAT—No. 1 Umothr. S3) l * « 2 2 . at*nd
ard and llaht ml-iad. SSaS*#21. No 2
UaaothT. $ l > a » ; No. 1 florer mixed. »1«
% 15; N o 1 clover. tl**>l». n-a at raw.
| l t a S # 1 3 ; arheat and oat atraw. Si 1 %*
%) 12 per to* la carlo**
FEED—ftraj*. $3S; vtandard mWdlinc*.
S35; ftn* mlddllnr*. S3C; cracked corn.
S44: coarae c o m m e a i 113; cnocv S3T per
ton In ISS-lb sacka In rau-tot*
FUOUR—Fancy apring wheat pat eat*.
ST.CS: extra fancy winter wheat patent*.
S7.TV winter wheat patent*. K r*. wintar wnaat atraighi*. Si 7« per bbl
*
Thinos
(
|
•
flafTW^—
\jfi{tJP0£tff^~
every eJement necessary for perfect oatHtm*
Grape-Nutt it partially pre-^iigested by 20 b o m '
bakiog. It it easily assimilated by child or adult.
Grape-Nut*, made of wheat aad barley, it tweet
with natural sugar teliKkveJoped from the graift
in the making. It hat a delightful nutMike kvor,
Grape-Nutt it r»W food—the kind you caff, dapend upon for strength aad energy. Ita
grannies invite thorough mat
ing to keep the teeth and gumt healthy.
Grape^ui* it ao eoaipaet ttaat a
taint many tervings; and eac"
amutual nounshmenL A portiott lor the
part ol a meal costs about aaw
Grape Nuts MO
"There's a
'a
POTATOES NEED GOOD
STORAGE CONDITIONS
TO
I ll.-t
Your Annual Garage Bill
Will be Smaller
BAZAAR
g.ili's
11
pruper
were
storage
emph.v ed,
i..',, i.
iin.sl
111-
prCMTllMJ
facilities
\« e r e
,- the opinion
w ..rein.use-
(inc
(In-
Last \VedricMi,i> fvcinn^, Oi^'t^
t«-ntl>, .i hirthd>i\' Miri^rise p.«rt\, hoin»r
IHJJ Mrh. Fannie Hili v,<.s In-Id <t tin'
home of Mrs. F, M Houdish
!\< I ,
pro
' <i
M'al
C o l b y t ,
iriist
prim
in.id
when
'•i\ 1n
m
H< -fori-
nf
uti"(i
harvesting
p.-iiii,
,i
being
fork
frost
tli.it
1),,Vc b e e n
is
is
m
piles
IS \ ( T V
in
Much
|K.,irlv
llkel.v
t n
windows
the
nt
ventilated
he.'t
a n d
IIO,,M •
in t h e t
II t h i
be left o p e n
n i g h t s s,. t h
t e m p e r . 1 l) re e.Mi h e h i W e r e i !
The
nut place
without
for
NOTED FOR SRUNG
iir.irt,
ndiaprite
['nt.it,>ex
huttoii
rot
ventilation
nuist
h.ive
frie
t>]x*s
i>:
e.-itni^
; i T KI
" W'hen
toe-,
Jackson. Mich
!;i]se
top
"t
t ( r\
]IITJHIMA,
hir«'<'
Ihiis
:i. rtition-.
t'r ,•!-,-- th.-it
It* nvade at tbt •
seed
t.llnii.''
or
\e',t
t h e l>i|; s h o u l d
he pl.ieed
v i \ In eiyht
(Anderson Comers,
•
;>\ i l ;
rack
F«ll
rack
llfcO!
On*
o(
rack
Coati,
fully
5»|>ort»
la.st
week
with
hack
h\
Mr. and
of
of C o a t v
rack
^f
collai-i
t
u p '
Coat*,
velour, holivi*,
intrrlin«l,
fall
•
•
with
$25.00
rnodrU,
mondym*,
in
Wolf,
s*t
(yerona, w o o l
in
ulervr*,
Un«>d and i n t f r l i i v r d , $ 3 5 . 0 0 and
On*-
.1,.
wool
and
fur
collars
ihe
popuUr
Coat*
o(
in
fa*hona,
i>q\iu 1-rl,
valour,
l.einiii'l
da \
otKer*
l*rp*
TOO MODEST
Bufl:
SHuckft, every t i m e I t r y t.
kiss Mist Snail, she goes in h e
•hetl
Glacier' "Get a Move.'
T h ; - - . - : l,v
effect*,
,, .- ;
i
Mr
Wirt
taek
of
attend
«nd
platinum
fov,
many
$45.00,
' In, !
l.iw*
K.i\
Suiutav
SILK
to
Stik
Dnr«»»
•< E W J M B
Sundav
Willard.
S t o r * Wour* S a t u r d a y
t
a
morning
and
8:30
A.
M. to 6 : 0 0
Viavr
tn
after
spent
!,i-t
111 W a t e r l o o .
xi.sitors
at
of. . l a e k s o i ,
the
honu
a
p;trl>
and
I'lemi-ns
T r a d * in
COMEDY-"FIRE THE FIREMAN"
i
«
.
SUNDAY, MONDAY
^
-
OCT 21, 22
"I
( ta 1 hr.1 it h,
(it
here
B e b e Daniels
in
.,nd
is veiling!
was
Ford
ui
and
of
|)etroi(
tran>
near
Tort
\wek
>injrlrton
and
shakinj;
hands
w,n
Willi
in
"PINK G O D S "
old
neifi'b h o r s .
(iirtrnile
i. hiiioi.iri
Villi
Msited
\ rhot
triends
, part
ot
in
.-, '
: SENNETT COMEDY
DETROIT NEWS
« i-i-k
M .1 n
' "in t
1\O\K lett
the
Mr
w eek
and
In
W
md
"sundav
n|
I.
was
(
,1. l t n h l
\ | r-
u ft h
Mi.
Irm .
1^
tin
fool
Hl.n -!
,nii
• \o
Ml-
last
'H'onias
ball
.Sal u r i h n
s
\ \ iln ,m
u nne
in
\i
a ! Ii • noon
I•'.
| | ill
iie ( o n , p a iiird
his
tarin
near
(.ill in r ot
Hfll
( oliiiis
untini:,
hi-i
Oak
I'l
with
I TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY
OCT 23, 24
ae, -otnp e
( . e . i r •.
H o w i II
M i m s . II a n d
to
h
end
Mrs
\| r
I this
M.
in
of
were eallirs
t'harle>
Katherine McDonald
"Her Social Value"
(.1 r e p i n
Frid;i>
f,,inii\
fatlier
Howlett
last
" A MAN'S MAN"
>atui
COMEDY
ins is \ , ,
no
ter B. Kyne's Story *
hopes
TRAVEL
|o-
h is re, m e n .
.li.n n
th*
l{ obi-rt s
I'owh-rviile
aft*rnoon.
'Ji>n
Mi'
Hfir
down
too|
Mn
v.,;u\v
sd\Hn,-iii5
n in,!,', He
md
the
tarm
John
i
last
1. 11 n 11 >
ot
,i nd
I mn
week
Atii]
Saturdnv
of
and
iu-r p.-ii-i'iils,
\rno|d
\
Sun<la\
nil"
week.
tmnlv
nvid
to
Wild-
moved
last
Mr
i ,o\ i-e
|'r..nk
\riTrnline
How m a n
iisiteii
\,
at
a 11 e i n o o n
:• i
j
>un
,-ihle
between
fi i e n d
Mt
Y p s i l n nt I jind
H
$ 5 9 h0,
«hivi;t
•V.
and
i sex e r e
was
OCT. 20
Sundav.
$1695.
P.
alter
( i a l h r . i it h
ol
111, k s o n
A c c o u n t * m a d * in A u g v k t and h * f o r * n o w d u * , c o m * »n and p a y u p .
|%%«M\\^\V««'
son
withi
spent
and
eon n s t n ' s ,
$52.50
Pnc*». $ 1 2 5 0 , $1^.95,
and
<-iui
Whitiuorc
Detroit
fSATU^DAY
and
liniilv.
nt
Aiit\
her
\ \ in.
I'
TAKNAM.
and
frame
Willard
M l-s
$49.50
1'osti r
lUlc
s<-hools l a s t
were
$16.50
DRtSSES.
'I'uesdi\
w et-k
! SENNETT COMEDY—
* IT PAYS TO EXERCISE "
X
Octohr'
Auburn.
p.iralvsis
Hill
villi
•lohn
l(.i.
BLAUTIFCL
to
the
of
hall
(i.
V rbor
Orr%tct^
Auburn,
leaving
Itanium
1'naditla
ittcndi'd
Wool
tie
noon.
,-it
$79 50.
New
of
Klsworth
infantile
the
spi nt
coma,
li.-id
home.
trienils
$37.50.
lu>-tros.a, g e r o n a .
h«-*vri
wrappy
IrmiK
Arnold's
Willi;, m
spent
Harris
at
Hurol^
of
Mrs.
Mrs.
Saturday,
Harris
missioriN
And
larfr* c o l l a r *
" b u r n i n g Sands"
suppir
quilts w e r e tied
CialbrHitl)
I'lMlik
niAtcrials,
H.
auto
Mrs,
liirniee
hist
And $ 2 9 . 7 5 .
! Milton Sills
W a n d a Hawley
l'linknev
lor
with
Monday,
l.anstn;:
hi-
$55.00
Mancnurian
Poultry
in
lin*<l
OCT. 18, 19
THURSDAY, FRIDAY
in
riiur>tia\.
Foster
Miw ]., S a t u r d a y
without,
^ " ^
T!iursd.i>
l>ein>: d u n e .
to .I.iekson
liiends
:
$ 2 5 . 0 0 to
,\ •,
Howard
llartv
On*
M r s . i . K.
held
0.
Tun
of
t eel
Coats a n d Dresses
On»
Eggs.
at
driving
to tin-
For Girls, Misses and Matrons
i n e y , oi
Office
Jiiid
S.
s<-win^
("I\ i r l e s
toi Aiiyotts —
- A n y * «icre
it v i A Cattle a n d
Peduriecs
texu;r c l i . p h o o t
S.
here
PERCY £LL1S
Auctioneer
til w I
t i n .
:-e.,< h 1 r „ i i t h e f l o o r
i h ot t roie
A.
othi-r
• md
with put.,
Hur
ill
l'iiii-kn<'\
A.
and
dt-velnji li'.u
;md other
1..
^,
piles
h r e a k d u u I I , ; n x l t h e \ W i l l h e s p o i l e d t'o-
6 0 0 0 GOODS CHEAP
129 to 135 East Main St.
providing
the pile,
in large
.'H'Cess ;<> ,-iir o r ! l n \ v i l l
GLASGOW ^OTHERS
^
potatoes
in
tiKik d i n i i i r
1..
t'harles
"l">o
wid
[*id"nii.i
M r s . \V;i(ij!iiMvr nf
tlir
> , e;i
'
,;i,ick
in
\l , I s
Wordfii
IV A r n o l d ' s h i s t
Mrs.
sj>ii||,
,.i,cl
.Mid
n l,-ir?«- . d t e n d a i x - c , !<IH.9.5 iMMnjr t ikt'ii
n
n d v e n t II,J t n r » n t t h e s t i i r . c i
should
O.
siites
r.T\'
|)|:ni-ii
si.i
Rix-hester,
point-
l.aiiMii
were
.it t h e t a l l i e s .
M.i
the
wlrn
" ! > n r i T i ij i n i i d vi, i-, 11 In -r
cellar
,;
HOWELL
Woptirii.
1>v
potatoes
,,
I leU le
thdlir.uth
for
id
Kr^nV
Wajtpwr
rut
t -, I I w h i l e
,-i nd
;i\
t
v e, •'
suffered
their
vk Mln
*•! MCK is iiu in 11 n r e ,
large
also
tin-
I,,
*
SHOWS A T 7;00 AND 9KX) O'CLOCK
II:
eoi.i
1 u<-sti,t\ .
Mr. .md
Mm-i.
F.vcrv
TEMPLF
PiPCOMU
6E0. MAT
OMANtST
iiiiprnmjr.
permanent
likelv
period
place
<'.i rl v
in
are
inss
win i
Weather
Mrs.
ill
exposed
\oted
M..nlord
other
lliii
l.isl
Ivdlitiurr
put.
w,i-
Ihe
ri-1 .it i v e s .
,it)t-iid<-d
thcv
considerate-
an*i
Mark
In re
maintained.
vr-ided, .md
Mrs
Tiifsd,<\
\ islt
dark.
m- ill s h a p e d
the storage
storage
in .i
vlnr;i^r,
n u t he p l a c e d
since
..TiiUrrv
he
in
I.tst
to
p.u'tv
we:<
to
FIRST
SHOW
7:15
ALWATS
w,t\
;MH^ l . c o i i . i r d
iielt-viile
disearded.
should
storage,
during
pi..ced
punct ured
let!
t e i u p e r a t H I T ,it
F. c a n
lie e a r e f n l l v
In-
tin
is well \ , til i l a t e e
umfrmn
degress
Mi-tad
eijrht
WHS s r n r d
the
,n,d
f.innU
\gricult
be s t n r e d
.uid
in «'\<*r\
\h
wind
|•
Supp<T
eess
I .alisuy .
should
ii ii I nix- n n ^r t\»«'(it_\
ti\rs
Michigan
!•.,« s i
"I'nt does
ie No. 39
Mick
nthers
:«- li.ui
e e l h i r ih.it
toes should
it
(
.,nd
tubers
e.m
«1<.|, , r t n i i a t ,
" I 'olrftix-
PINCKNEY GARAGE
H
\ I u I,
Hie p o i n t e r s
"i, si,inn,;
I rj t c > n 11., 11 < • ri
ropv
W M . H. M E Y L R
uf
.<( tin-
men
miestions
.11111111-1
are
^ 1«" h r<' f u r
iVilClU^dXi
LENEBERG
Auctioneer
for Everybody
kfevmg a u i o ,
and auction
freeid Street
expense
GREGORY
M u h )
V{,I|-,,^,
I !,,,,- ci.;iM(|iT,it|nn
Iwtore
r e s n ! | v , , , | , I,,. ,4,1 , , , , , , - , 1 .
| |,r ,,,|
should
IswAKrHOur
I,,
V;:rici:h u r.,1 ( u l l r j r c .
(•mvers,
cut,
r«l Director
CiHlId
M - ' n r e , e \ t . (i v . i t . s p e e i . i h s t
if the work on your car is
always done by a reliable,
skilled mechanic wh >ae
first, last and only aim is
to fully satisfy his patrons
S^V>viSi ALX
(T>i|i
losses
i id«-d uid pn.pei incilinds .,t handling
•iiUlliii
», Gtnst&l Repamju ' '
also
a l.!;!l*l
[lill^tK
• ifxl
l,
cs|
Tablets
'encils
id all
Supplies
i. r e a l
of
and
Marion
Nil's
attended
tieo
i COMING—
" To Have and to Hold *
rhnreh
lien-
II.
T,
|to.,rd
** Handsome is as Handsome Does *
H o w lett
of
l(i|ss,ll
S»ind;i\
Munith
tire
i A Cos*'
>«K,M-s
i»r>
,,1
from
Pow*rr*wn
th*
Standpoint
»W»n* d o e s
not
m a k e it t h * m o * t
nileafr* it
i« p r n d k t c m c
of
in t h e
Cord*
Beauty
it
fit
of
to
t a l k e d of
hand* of
count*
ffrac*
apparent
the
at
world'*
rir* i n M I C H I G A N
our
'<• i
\' \ K.
finf*t
r
fir*t
motor
t o d a y , it i« t h *
planer,
car&.
a
Thi*
wonderful
customer*.
The
result
ot
yeai-*
earnest
effort
to
produce
a
little
better
*h* Z«« Z a s t r e a d w i t h wo c e n t e r RTVW y o « p e r f e c t t r a c t i o n a t all
^ l
on*'«
A Strictly HAND BUILT QUALITY TIRE
i
t
of
POWERTO WN
CORDS
|s Pin ckiic-y
change 3ank
i. * ^-
beauty
ripfct
i
to
ow
tire
th»n
the
Ke*t.
t i m e * a n d «k»*rvr<i
the
»*oc*m.
The Safest Tire in America to Ride On
Head*
*«rl d»t»rrt!
wnt •V^ftJd* if
it tW U r «
i s » t*r^*h»nt
!•>* to r*V<
Catarr)
Buy from your nearest dealer
R. DAY BIRD, Ford Sales and Service, Pinckney, Mich.
ECK MOTOR SALES, Dexter, Mick
HOFF & SMITH, Howell, Mick
I.
S. D. LAPHAM & SONS,
DISTRIBUTORS
spent
one
in
1 i\ 1-riin'IT
How ell
last
.nu\
on
tin
BILL BOOSTER SAYS
week
fanill}
spe: '
at Mrs Aeries Handolph's .-,:
M. A. C BOY WINS AT
NATIONAL DAIRY SHOW
C
Miss
Th*
w as
Supervisors
Minnie
a
d iv
ltradshau
short
time
last
week.
at
\\
ni
POUII.M
H.
M
rsh's
D. Miller, of Etton Rapids, B ^ t
Student Jod»e—Club hoy%
Alao Do Well
CUMVAS A V E t0V4U& VtfvTUtS,
A Mirlii^an l>ov, Cidiries l). Miller of
F-iiton
Kjii^id.s, won lr>t honors in dairy
from the north list w eek
rattte jtidjrinjr for eoliepr students at
the National Hairy Show in Syracuse,
WORKS R > « M X \WW»R0>«*AEUT^ New I.ork, last week. Miller WAS A
PCOkAOTES rUkftkAOMM A ^ O
member of the Michip-nn A^ricullnr»l
ASSISTS V>4 T U £ «OCCSS6C« Q*
ANDERSON
College .jiid^inp team wh»eh placed
seventh among, the -JS college teams entered.
Competing against *; ,,f the h*>t
Mr. and Mrs Robert
H«<rt -itnl |
college student jndgt^s in the country
H a i t c h t e r of
1 .inwiic spent
llie week
(there were three men on each t e a m ) .
e n d at t h e i r h o m e h e r e ,
Miller
stood first with both Jersey and
M r s . 1 M w r e n e e S p e a r s s p e n t tin n rst
Hokrein cattle nnd r.inked hign rnou«h
of t h r w e e k w i t h h e r s i s t e r . M r s . l . m , , s i
in the other breeds to lead the entire
S n c h n n , helping: c u r e
f o r h e r f.-itlu contest
for the sweesptakes award.
M r - I'i|ilad> w a s \ e r \
ill, b u t is n i n e !
Wlnle M, A. C. teams hare stood
better now.
!
high before in the national competition,
M r . u n d M r s , M a r b l e w e r e iii I . tithis is the first lime that the premier
m e S i m r l a v t o s e e M r ("1 i r r n e r H o l m e s
honors among individuals have been
n-bo is v-erv s c r i o n s l v
il..
brought back to the state
\1r. and Mrs. O t t o Killenberir'r and
Th? Michigan cbib lwn> judging team
Mr
J n l m l > i x - k i n p w e r e in F l i n l
>ut
also won high laurels at the hi K show,
d a \ of l a s t w e e k .
finishing third among jn. teams from
Mr
and Mrs. J o h n
M. H a r r i s
and
states s,atiered all over the country.
faniilv
a t e SiinHav
dinner
U
Ite
Illinois, and Connecticut won first and
s«s-or»d places, respectively.
Wliitev
The Michigan team was composed of
M r a n d M r s . tics:'*, ( i r e m e r > r . e n l r .Tames (iaJlup of tiaastra. Iron Copnty;
t-iinetl S i s t e r
Vlacoqnr together
wjMi
Starr Northrun, Northville, W a v n e '
twn o t h e r sister* f r o m H u n k e r Hill aeCounty; Roland Stein, Ann Arbor,
eoinp«n»ed b \ Miss
Kllcn
wnd
,1-inr
Delhv
Washtenaw County; a»«d GWm* UmrII unk'ir<i. Simtlflv'
•
tr 7*TI ^wwTit TC u r n v ! T * ft*mfh, try
more,
Romeo, Macomb County. A fitMr
a n d Mrs. M J < \ 1 erl» ids .- w e - r
to rake owity th« tny «4^pluint rlitt
•III i h,!son SaHird.,> to sesr M r . T5r „
s o r t * H a n s brought t o Tonv and ' *
!"„"
^ln'r show *'**«»M
n r
, -*n mho was q uiie badlx burned last WH-MV. Hephantu 1« rh» Ro«to?i too. J™
°
"C™rk of Saj>d O e e k , ;
» c e k b u t is r m p r o v i n g s)r>-»|\.
Thoy ar* a* n>lHrht«Hl with rlwir [ ^ ^
* n d H*rUwi
Andrew*, of
toy as a little tfrl with h*r C*ri«tnMia Adrian l.enawer Countj-.
T h r
don.
^0^ w r r r ^ ^ 1 f<> %rac»«e by
!t h f St tf
rop ROOM hn Hur-van Bedy.
The parental imtfact la t h * hasia
* " h " v m « W f t n t h * ***** « •
The public hrnlth s e n .<•*• s«vs th.-t <vf aU life.
reprrM-nt the state by virtue «f vte.tbe-hnmrtn skei^on is e,,mf„.s.^ of itm
Mothers hy t-ach»nc their small ; t o r i , > ,ri t h r r , , , h * hy>'s" j « < _
dNUnn »»on»»s. i r i s , | n i ! - , | ;m«« four d.'injhters to rn>e for doll* aa if th«y * t t h r '"** s , " t r f a i r - T h * y
rectons: The vknl! ,-..: ->(.vr-,j of J J ut«re groiUng children, ran h*<lp shape companied to the Natonail Sb«W hy
h«no>; the trunk, ciii,:..,»>,) ,,f r,4 tl»e characters and car#*r» of th# third Neveis I'earson, assistant state d a k
hone*; the upper e\iremitws, i>nn
g«'t»erat»on, a« yet unborn—Chicago leader under the Jf. A. C.
riivituon, who sajpcr%i»ed
powv] of £4 buncs. artd the lower e s
Po^rt,
the
jodfiaaj
treaoltiea, contpoaed of en bone*.
i
v
r
—
Miss
Frankic
Plaeewav
,an,e
holm
"*
rwmimx
to.
-
DISPATCH
14a*!'. V.WI
i
'
Pinckney
John
WANTS, FOR SALE, ETC
Vines
and f a m i l y of H o w e l l
Mrs. J a m e s D o c k i n g I W A N T E D — T w o copies of tin- I'inck- '
n e y D u p a t c h of the S e p t e m b e r 19th
1
„,
,
,, .
. .
. ,,
iaaue.
Inquire thin officr.
Charles H i c k s and family ot I'ariua,
s p e n t S u n d a y with Mr. and Mrs. W. ; LOST—-Gold watch with Indian l o b . |
S. S w a r t h o u t .
Reward.
Duinino Feed C o . , H o w e l l , jj
11
Mrs.
HulUah J o n e s and son Will of I F O R SAI.F. -C.rern and ripe tornato<•^. I
D e t r o i t .spent t h e week end with Mrs.
Frank M o w e r s .
i'
S o p h i a Blunt.
'
, F O R SAI.F.
N e w Milch r o w a n d calf 11
Mi.vs Ituth G a l l i g a n spent Suiidav .it
for salr
W . C. H e n d r c .
J
the h o m e of her parents Mr diid Mrs.
!
Cha*,. G a l l i g a n .
G O O D P O T A T O E S for sale.
jj
j
T n f o n Pian
,•
Mrs.
Andrew
B a t e s and D o n a l d |
|.
3 . 5 0 pD
e rr yc oO
r da.k a n d j j
P o o l e o f L a n s i n g s p e n t S u n d a y at the F OHRi c kSoAr yL Ew—o o1 d0 ,0 $cords
Lapham Farms.
h o m e o f Mr. and Mrs. Clias. Galligan
and f a m i l v .
S A L E — Finewool
Ram,
also
The Misses Fern and 1 .utile T u p p e r F O R
grapes.
R. G. W e b b .
were home from Ann Arbor Sunday.
Mrs.
G. W. R e a s o n is s p e n d i n g a
F O R S A L E - H o u s e h o l d furniture. In- j
c o u p l e of w e e k s in Mt. Clemens,
(1 uire R o s s T. R e a d .
j
The Misses Pearl a n d R a e Clemo of
D e t r o i t , Mr. a n d Mrs. F l e t c h e r C l e m o W A N T E D - Old and s e c o n d h a n d furniture. H a r r y S t o r e y , D e x t e r .
of J a c k s o n were S u n d a y g u e s t s of the
H a y e s Sisters.
F O R SAI.F. — One gallon g a s p u m p .
Entered at the PoateAoe at Pinck- j c a i l e d on Mr. and
iey, Mich., M Second Olaai Matter I[ S u n d a y a f t e r n o o n
UICOU £ S1ITH
rmisKu
%«aseii»ttea, $1.1* » Tear is Advaac*
Advertising rats* snada kaown <*i
• uaiictttifta.
Card* of Thanks, afty oeau.
Kaaolutioaa of Coadalaaca, $1.50
Local Notices, ia L*cal oeluaias
-cat par lio* ptr each insert! oa.
All Basilar lataadad to beaaft taa par•ooal or buaiata* iatersat of say iadiridlal will b« pablUaod at regular advertise
n* rat**.
Aoooaaceatot of esrtertaiaaiaaU, ate.,
uuat b« paid for at regmJar Local Nauoe
*iea.
Obituary sad aaarriaga aoiioot are pobuihed fre* of obarge.
Poetry moat b« paid for at ibe rat* ef
v« cfDU per line.
•-H-'
23c
8<
25c
2Sc
24c
28c
28c
24c
TWr OUR BULK TEA FOR SATURDAY ONLY AT 58c •
LOCAL AND GENERAL
j Reason & Reason
1
[
Saturday Cash
Specials
3 Package* Macaroni
Argo Cora Starch
2 Cans of Del Monte Corn.
2 Cam of Peas
2 Large Packages Flakes
1 Can of Corned Beef
No, 1 Red Salmon
3 Bars of Any Toilet Soap
Qippatch
Will D o c k i n g and f a m i l y and Jan.
D o c k i n g and wife s p e n t Sunday with
Mrs. Mable E d g a r o f Ma.son.
Miss B l a n c h e
e n d in D e t r o i t .
Frost
s p e n t the w e e k
FLIES
Kill them the Modern Way
Th« U t t thing* w a n t a d
place «r« fliet, m o t q u i t o . . .
bugs.
H e r e t o f o r e , the remedies f or these indoor i n s e c t s
h a v e been a l m o t t «» bed a t the b u g s t h e u M l v a * .
Insect p o v d e r t e r e
c l e s i or hornet will not
From the use of in»«ct
pleasant to look »t e n d
Most
stain.
Whet
Meyer's P i n c k n e y G a r a g e .
Mr. a n d Mrs. Frank
B e a c h , Mrs.
F a n n y H i e k e y , Mr. a n d Mrs. Dwight F O R R E N T — B l a c k s m i t h
shop with
a n d Mrs. Met* of H o w e l l were Pincko n e l i v i n g room in P i n c k n e y .
Inney callers Monday.
quire P i n c k n e y E x c h a n g e B a n k .
•••1
rftwaiinn-feWiBiifci
COAL
Kentucky Domestic
Soft Coal
j
$7.80
Delivered
C. V. VAN WINKLE
Pinckney
-*-
Bakery
For Pies and Pastry
Buns and Rolls
Fried Cakes and Doughnuts
#of Highest Quality
The Demand for Our Bread
This Proves Its Excellence
G. BL.AIMK&N, Prop.
Pinckney Grist Mill
W t are now equipped with the latest and most improved
grinding and crushing machinery
capacity n one and one-half tons per hour,
ground to suit
Mil is running every day
once and we feel sure you will
Let as do your
!
C. A L B E R T F R O S T
..*,
Miss S a d i e H a r r i s and Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. G a r d n e r a n d d a u g h t e r s visited
S t a n t o n - r e l n t i v e s last werk.
rs.
Marble, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Jas.
C. V. V a n W i n k l e were L a n s i n g
visitors Sunday
Mr. a n d Mrs. . l a m e s Tiplady of Det r o i t s p e n t the w e e k e n d w i t h Pinckne.N
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. W a l t e r R e a s o n of Detroit a n n o u n c e t h e arrival of a d a u g h ter, O c t o b e r 13th.
Mrs. A n d r e w B a t e s and D o n a l d Pool
of L a n s i n g were P i n c k n e y callers S u n day.
Mrs- H a t tic D e c k e r , Mrs. C. L. S i g
ler and D r . H. F, S i g l e r m o t o r e d t o
D e t r o i t last F r i d a y .
Mrs.
F r e d Benr„ Mrs. C. L. S i g l e r
and D r H . F. S i g l e r w e r e L a n s i n g
visitors M o n d a y .
Mrs. H . F. S i g l e r is s p e n d i n g several
w e e k s w i t h friends at W a s h i n g t o n , I).
C.
Mr. and Mrs. I-ouis Monks and
daughter of Jackson
were
Pinckney
callers Sunday.
O v e r 100 g u e s t s a t t e n d e d the d a n c i n g
p a r t y at t h e h o m e o f C l a r e n c e S t a c k able, last F r i d a y e v e n i n g .
Mr. G e o . R e a s o n of I>etroit w a s the
g u e s t of Mr. and Mrs. N o r m a n R e a s o n
last w e r k .
Mrs.
I., G. D e v c r e a u v and children
s p e n t the w e e k e n d w i t h Ypsilanti relatives.
. ^.
LAXATIVE
Aged
Mrs.
F l o r a S m i t h and Mrs
D i n k e l a n d son J u n i o r were
bridge v i s i t o r s last F r i d a y .
of old age is constipation. The bowels become weak tad unable to perform their
factions without aid, Jpor this purpose only
the mildest and gentlest laxative should be used.
The use of harsh cathartics aggravates the trouble
and makes the constipation worse, Chamberlain'i
Tablet* are a favorite with people of middle age
and older on account of their gentle action,
'•wimberlain's Tablets
Eugene
Stock-
Mr. a n d Mrs. Alvin B u c k of F e n t o n
are g u e s t s o f Mr. a n d Mrs. W. HClark.
Much has been said in the past .ilioiit
Brighton's nerd of vv.itrr works and
pa v fluents
Especially durum the past
vear has the nerd of p.ivcnient been
sern
With all the work that has lieci<
put on t h e s t r e e t s they have been *<»
rough that thev arc a d i s g r a c e to the
the village.
The gravel streets uill not
hold up under the hcavv traffic that
thev are s u b j e c t e d to
Nearlv e \ e r \ o n e now seems to he satslied that j>a\
inn is the milv thing for our business
streets, and tliat it w ill a c t u a l h be ;
s a v i n g of1 money to pave instead of con
tinmilly repairing them and then not
having anything.
The p e o p l e are to have a chance to
v o t e on t h e question s o o n , as the vilagr
council at their last m e e t i n g has start
ed the ball rolling which is likelv to re
suit in p a v i n g that purf o f G r a n d River
street that the state does not pave, also
p a v i n g Main street t o the railroad
The question of p a v i n g is so thoroughly
settled in the minds of most people
that the council has e m p l o y e d an engineer t o m a k e a survey of the village
»^(\ make plans and specification* showing where water
mains and
sewers
should be pluced. A special election
wilt be held in the near future to vote
on the question of bonding the village
for p a v i n g nnd for p u t t i n g in t h e mains
b e n e a ' h t h e p a v i n g - Argu*
A N N ARHOH
Heing fined for speed
ing is irritating at any time, but when
the fine e x c e e d s the cost of the CUT
the
situation
becomes
tragic. So
think t h r e e I ' n i v e r s i t y
of Michigan
s t u d e n t s w h o w e n - recently fined *1H.*S
for g o i n g to fast.
The s t u d e n t s had each subscribed si*,
dollars t o w a r d the purchase nf a Ford
of a n t h p i e origin. On t h e m a i d e n trip,
p l a n n e d as n speed test, the machine
w a s s p o t t e d by an offk-cr, and thr
three
occupants
wcrr
eventually
brought before J u d g e J o h n D. T h o m a s ,
W h e n t h r fine o f .*!K.t.1 WHS d e m a n d e d
the driver offered the c a r and *S c e n t s
in c h a n g e . T h e j u d g e took o n e look
at the m a c h i n e and d e m a n d e d r;«*h.
T h e o w n e r s point w i t h pride t o the
s p e e d o f 3 3 miles an hour, with which
t h e y w e r e c h a r g e d b e f o r e the court.
dard.
to fourteen dsra. Becnuae of the lark
were Ssradaj calkrs at the Ha*e and The Ford wis taken to Palmer's garage of inherency, adobes can be employed
anal the work on this car wul amoant I only la refloat a< Qmlttd rslaisii.
XspUsty
aad
linen, c u r t a i n s , wallpaper, etc. It it not p o i s o n o u s ,
e v e n if taken internally by m a n , fowl or beast.
The o d o r is pleasantly a r o m a t i c and passes a w a g
q u i c k l y when the w i n d o w s are o p e n .
It it a w o n d e r f u l c l e a n e r for glass a n d enar
ware. Will remove paint from clothing.
SPRAYER FREE
With Each Bottle
BARRY'S
Y A L
SR U G S
STORE
an
LIGHTING FOR PROFITS
The difference between a busy and prosperous stacajawl.
one in which business is unsatisfactory is oftest, a«ntjea*
mostly, a matter of foot*candles or itluminaf
It has been demonstrated over and over that one of
prime factors in mrchandising is good lighting. Exampfat
Small department store. Lighted to 5 foot-candles.
For test purposes the store was operated one day
under 5 foot-candles and one day under 15 footcandles, alternating for a period of six weeks.
Results, 1.12 per cent more buyers under 15
candles. 2.29 per cent increase in unit
sales.
It has been found that over 70 per cent of
art
poorly lighted. You can have our assistance to defer*
mine your foot-candle illumination.
THE DETROIT EDIS,.<
COMPANY
elrmlstjwn dn«> tn alenhoi tpeeded np
th# work af tha pnlaoii.
S*rtrm has ha*n nVlleated hy air-
His Misinformation,
They wrr<- dining nt a f;ish!nnsf
r e s t a u r a n i , the < 'iMinnrrn' Man at
the
i;o**i]i.
"Sec that man over there?" said the
latter.
"Well, he 1« James It. Smith from
I'enrla. Jll."
"Indeed !"
"Vrs, tie s Jnst made $2llO,,iX«0 In t h e
market."
- %'_
t \
"Well, denr boy," said t h e ,
rr-' Man. "you'
wrong fun* l l t ^ j a
"Indfed?"
"Yes—hia
narue» ia Howard ST
J o n e s ''
" Y ••*:••'
"Ami he IK from Sprinjfleld..Xta**."
"Yes?"
"And the amount wns not JMO.OOfV'*
•NnV
"It wa* $20,00n."
"Yes?"
"And he lost it."—HoMon Glotje,
A CONNOIMIUK
"5C
^*
plane fa r«apnt»af> rn radio ctlla, and
Is infallible as a <-nre tf inject«>d
within six hour* according ta Director Dlttmara af thev Ftronx tee. •
Judges leek better on the beaca thaa
at noma.
CMd-Msn Tnrrte—My.
HoneatT invitee criticism, bat ate* piece bathing auits are
pacts critics.
"•*•
N^V;-
b a d l y , discolor
is F L Y T O X ?
H O W K L L - We An- tod.iv i n f o r m e d
that, o w i n g to the greitlv
increased
business and the added t e r n t o r v taken
over hv Monks A: Scullv, general agent*
of the C'itirrns' Mutual A u t o I n s u r a n c e
S A F 1 PROPACo, nf this c i t y , thev find it nrce**arv
GANDA
to open an additional office in thr eitv
of J a c k s o n , for the purpose of c a r i n g
W h a t ' s the
itfaa at a little
for their intrre*1s in .lack*i»n c o u n t y ,
firm II kt yatira
ns well as the a d j o i n i n g c o u n t i e s o f !
with a maaaive
L e n a w e e , F.aton. Calhoun and ICirrv.
safe Hktthat?
T h e i r local Howell office, in the
It helps the
Larkin A: Kruger hhwk, will still be
marala sf avr
m a i n t a i n e d t o further their interest* in
cradltsrs.
L i v i n g s t o n and a d j o i n i n g c o u n t i e s controlled ,hy them,
!
W e are advised that Mr. Monk* a n d ]
Mr. Fitr.imnions, w h o has been associ••rum far anakt Bites.
ated with Monks A Scully since the ,
Stitr
drope nf v#nom. which will
o p e n i n g o f their local office, will both j
move to J a c k s o n , while Mr. Scullv will j form the haaia of a serum to cure
reoiain here in change of the H o w e l l , enako hitea. were milked frmu ,'i!v <op
perbwid and ntocvaain an«ke« In the
office.
|
Bronx itoo, N>w Tnrk
Kxpi-r1ment«
Moth Mr. Monks and Mr. Fitramnmns I
In
Rrazll,
e«tahllahlng
that
«sfaky Is
arc y o u n g m e n , possessed of m u c h h u s - (
rm
retnedT
for
snake
hltea,
Have led
incs* ability, h a v i n g c o m e t o H o w e l l
to an incre-aatHl demand for «rurn.
frou* P i n c k n e y some three y e a r s a g o ,
Grnnpa of sober animal* ard rrnupB
and their m a n y H o w e l l frtrnds a-nti rmi*of IntOTlratH rme« w#re bitten hy
inevs aiinoeiaten, while very m u c h reanake* In the erparimanta. The aober
g r e t t i n g t o sex t h e h o y s l e a v e H o w e l l ,
onea »wjtllv#>d the drnnka hr fire nr air
wish t h e m u n b o u n d e d success m their
hours. Indicating that the Inrrrsaed
new
field.—Republican
C'HKI~SKA—A D o d g e s e d a n , occupied hy t w o men and three ladies WHS
Mr. and M<S M J Reason and sons
o v e r t u r n e d on Ml 7, at Freer'* c o r n e r s .
spent Sunday with Whitmorc L*ke relL i m a , at II o'clock S u n d a y forenoon
atives.
T h e p a r t y in t h r srehm w r r r t r a v e l i n g
Mr. end Mrs. Myron Dunning of w e s t , and a f o r d t o u r i n g c a r c o m i n g
Detroit WOT Sunday guests of Mrs. f r o m t h e s o u t h , ran tntn the rear e n d
of t h e sedan.
Nellie Dunning.
O n e o f t h e l a d i e s m o t h e r o f the drivMr*. Ralph Elliott and *or. Charles rr, w a s q u i t e badly i n j u r e d and the
and H. M- Benhain of Ypstlaati spent o t h e r m e m b e r s o f the party w e r e more
Bakina Adetoa.
the week end with the Haxe Sisters.
or less brained.
Ad<>b»»
miv
be made from apv tnatsv
A f t e r t h e colliwon t h e driver of the
Mr- and Mr*. Irvin Kennedy and sons
rlr.l w h i c h h # c o m « i h s r n > n « l rw *XFord a b a n d o n e d his m a c h i n e and left
and Mil* ElUabeth Spears spent Sunl>cMir* to th»> iron. The prr»r«>aa nf
for parts unknown.
day with Dexter friend*.
T h e D o d f e e a r was t a k e n t o ,FoneV Iwkins* ennarats la tlmt rTprmlnt th*
iK.ided brletra to the direct rays m! the
Mrs.
E t t a R e a s o n o f Chelaea, M r s . t g a r a g e a n d t h e repair MM will h e besim for a day. then turning them, exD o r o t h y W a l l a c e , Mr. a n d Mrs. G e o t w e r n flion and $ 4 0 0 . T h r b o d y , t o p
P *ing dlffeTent face* f«r fre»m aerea
M a t t h e w * a n d O r a R e a s o n o f D e t r o i t ami fenders ATC practically ruinned.
to aaitt a
a&L
( 111-.I.SI- A F a i l u n
lo . lose the
Main street crossing gates iii ample
time to prevent Ins driving unto the
mam tracks nf tin Michigan ( i n t r a l
r nlroad i , , s | the life of Richard \\ hll
lali. 7*, North ! ike resident, at I'.'L.MI
> a t u r d a \ afternoon when the machine
which he was driving was -truck hv a
fast p a s s e n g e r tram, r i s t h o n o d
Mr
W h i l i a n s body wa* thrown clear ot the
de
lished machine, l a n d i n g several
feit to o n e side of the track
\ fraetttre-d *kttU tttnl t»th«'f tiHttrw* lamM'd
almost instant death, he living only a
few minute* after the crash
Confusion on the part of ImMi Mr
Whalian and the crossing watt hm.in
inav he partially to ^Jame for the fatal
accident.
According to person* w h o
claimed to be e v e witnesses of the .n'
extent, the south gates ware not low
ered until after Mr. Wh.than, who wa*
a p p r o a c h i n g f r o m the north, had driven
o n t o the tracks.
ApparenHv realising
he was cnught in a trap it is thought
the a g e d driver became c o n f u s e d and
was neither able to *top hi.* car or
drive it h e a d l o n g into the south g a t e ,
either m o v e calling for iptick action on
hi* part
A* fate would have it, the
machine w;t* h n o i g h t to a step directly
in front of the onrnshing flyer -Stan
smell
It will not stain or harm the m o s t delica'te fabrics,
Mr. and Mrs. Mcrvin Nile and son, F O R S A I . F . — S o m e c h o i c e hay. Inquire of John R. Martin.
Leo
and G e o r g e l . e a v e y of J a c k s o n
Mr. a n d Mrs. F l o y d R e a s o n visited
were
o
v
e
r
S
u
n
d
a
y
visitors
at
the
home
H A T C H I N G EGGS—Superior quality,
Maple R a p i d s f r i e n d s this week.
of P. L e a v e y .
winter laying White Leghonrs.
50
Miss I.uella H a y e s is visiting relat\*nts per d o t e n . Lily W h i t e P o u l t r y
Dr. C. B. Gardner anad family of
t i v e s at V p s i l a n t i .
F a r m , Chas. MacGregor.
L a n s i n g and O t i s W e b b and family of
Mrs.
Lucy W i l l i s t o n is visiting her H o w e l l were
Sunday
callers ,it the F O R
SERVICE—Shorthorn Durham
d a u g h t e r at N o r t h L a k e .
Bull eligible for registry.
home of IP B. Gardner.
Ed. S p e a r s .
D a n c e .it M a s o n i c hall F r i d a v CTI'IIMr. and Mrs. W a r d S w a r t h o u t of
ing.
E v e r y o n e invited.
Poland C h i n a Boar.
J a c k s o n , Mrs. and Mrs. G e o . Bradley R E G I S T E R E D
( W . E . L i v i n g s t o n s t r a i n ) for Mr
of Flint were S u n d a y g u e s t s of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. ,1. P. D o y l e were Ann
vice. E d . S p e a r s , a c e m i l t w e s t
anad Mrs. S. E. S w a r t h o u t .
Arbor visitors S a t u r d a y .
of t o w n .
.Miss Myrtle Graham of Rock Island,
Mrs.
C. P. S y k c s and Mrs. F.rnest
Age 10,
III.,
Miss Mae J e s p e r s e n and H. G. P U R E L I T E I N S U R A N C E .
Frost spent M o n d a y in S t o c k h r i d g e .
f 14.36.
A g e 40, | l » . 4 1 .
G r a h a m of Grand R a p i d s were recent
R. J. Carr, A f t
Mrs. Fred Ben/, of A n n Arbor is the g u e s t s of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Graham at
JUSTICE OF T H E PEACE
their c o t t a g e at Base Lake.
guest of Dr. and Mrs. C. L. Sigler.
C. A l b e r t F r o s t
Mrs.
A. C. Watkitis, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Glen V a n B u r e n a n d son I'.lmer
('hire S w a r t h o u t and (Maude S w a r t | m u t
of Detroit visited E. B e y e r Monday.
1'niler the new auto taw passed hv
of Detroit and Will 'livmi of Arm ArMr. and Mrs. P. H. S w a r t h o u t were bor were S u n d a y visitors it the Mark the lasl legislature all driver*, nf m o t o r
Ann A r b o r callers M o n d a y
vehicles should c o m e to a full stop lie
Sw artbout home.
fore thev drive upon . i lis truok line
Mrs.
M. B o w e r s spent the last t w o
is drivers on these tlm rou gh f ,i res have
w e e k s in Detroit v i s i t i n g relatives.
the right of « a v
I >epu t v Sheri *T 1
I' M i I in i w a -.
Mrs.
1 V C o n r a d aiul son Robert
NEIGHBORING NEWS
c
a
lied
I
o
lh(
sec
n
e
of
I ll e iii'i 1(1 e lit .
of L a n s i n g spent several d a v * last week
Sta
nda
rd
with Mr. and Mrs. Will Fish.
Mr. a n d Mrs. S. K. Darwin spent
several d a y s this week with Saginaw
friends.
insectides
It is a clear amber c o l o r e d liquid which y o u apply
with en ordinary garden sprayer or mouth sprayer.
Monday
Mr. a n d Mrs. F l o y d J a c k s o n of D e troit w e r e w e e k e n d g n e s t s of Mr. and
Mrs. W . C . Miller
~ f)lpie
>f?v
A n n A r b o r visitors
liquid
messy to U M e n d the battar
put up w i t h the d u s t r e s u l t i n g
powder. Fly p . p . r i, not a
poorly efficient.
It is « h o u s e h o l d insectide e n d d e o d o r a n t .
Mrs.
Klla N e w m a n , Mrs. Arthur F O R S A L E — A r i s t o c r a t i c B a r r e d R o c k
Mr. a n d Mrs. S. E. S w a r t h o u t were F o r n e r and children of Vpsilanti were
and S i l v e r C a m p i n e e g g s , for h a t c h B r i g h t o n c a l l e r s t h e first of the w e e k . g u e s t s o f Mrs. L, G. D e v c r e e a i i x .seving. $2.00 a setting.
B e n E. W h i t e .
Mr. and Mrs. V II S w a r t h o u t were eral d a y s List week.
^ » -
in a horn* or bus
roaches, moths or
PINCKNEY DISPATCH
I
Lansing—The Michigan Children's
HENRYC WALLACE
Aid society will hold its annual business meeting at Lansing, October 2(.
East 1 Analog—The appointment of
Mrs. Olive Oobson Henkel as instructor In voice at the Michigan Agricultural college has been announced.
Mrs. Henkel Is known in Lansing
16 Man la toe
county social and musical circles.
>
•WpervisorB voted 22 to 2 In 1 Charlotte—A Tew minutes after he
Balding a special election to '• had remarked to his host, Dr. E. C.
4 head Issue sufficient to pay Palmer, that he expected to live
's share of the cost of to be 100 years old, J. W. Munger,
' H 4 1 through the county here .a retired hardware merchant, died
| suddenly while sitting in his auto-T»e supervisors have au- mobile.
shajrman and clerk to enter I Detroit—Herman A. Merlke, 34
jfsfesUnet with federal and state j years old. was electrocuted
while
to test cattle in Monroe trimming a tree in the rear of his
jr tuberculosis trouble. The home. The saw he was using came
SO was fixed for 1924 and in contact with a high tension line of
leant in 1926.
tthe Detroit Edison Co. The power
it's Community Fund bud- . line carried 6,000 volts.
tft t^t4 has been fixed at 1225,- J Grand Rapids—William Moerdyke,
wllhy It charitable and semi- , 83 years old, probably the oldest court
organlxatlons. including crier In the United States, has called
ttwml sectarian societies, partlci- jthe United States District Court here
«4. campaign to raise the funds to order for the last time. After 15
Kansas City, Mo.—Henry C. Walbe started late this month.
years at the gavel Moerdyke resigned
lace, secretary of the United States
because
of
falling
health.
^.Rapids—Walter Grant, of
Detroit—Michigan was granted per- department of agriculture, who assails
r elected president of the
a hxed price by the government on
foofeaaional Photographers mission by the supreme court to file wheat
til* concluding session here of the an original action against Wisconsin,
convention.
Charles arising out of the disputes between
« t Detroit, was elected vlce- the two states as to the proper loca- URGES FEDERAL SUPERVISION
IL, The next convention will tion of their boundary along the Montreal and Menominee rivers.
In Flint
Failure of State Banks to Enter ReKalamazoo—Edmund F. Arras, of
tnw Oturlri Rockwell, former
serve System Investigated.
CCf Of the board of education and Columbus, 0., president of the Klbeslness man, was appointed wanis International, attended the conWashington — Par collection of
City commission, to fill the va- vention of the Michigan district Klchecks
and the placing of all banking
wan
is
Club
here.
More
than
1,500
nsused by resignation of Rev.
under
federal
supervision were among
Klwanls,
representing
every
local
orH. Brnady, transferred to a
the
measures
urged Thursday before
ganisation
in
both
peninsulas,
are
charch> Rockwell was the
the Joint congressional committee inexpected.
Lansing—Nearly a thousand dele- vestigating failure of state banks to
e C. N. Dlckengates and visitors in Lansing for the enter the federal reserve system.
and William E.
J. H. Tregoe, of New York, secre| second annual convention
of
the
have been selecttary-treasurer
of the National AssoMichigan
Baraca-Phllathea
Union.
•<&*
end secretary respectlveThe union Is Interdenominational, ciation of Credit Men, advocated both
Twenty-flrst Michigan Inbeing composed of Baraca and Phlla- proposals, while W. W. Orr, assistant
ordered out at thea Sunday school classes through- secretary of the association, stressed
13, 1862, and re out the state.
the desire for par collection In his
1MI.
testimony.
Marshall—Orders approving the sale
Declaring: banking was one of the
John R. Efflnger,
of the Battle Creek and Marshall Citfunctions belonging; to the federal
literary college, represented
izens Telephone Co. properties were
government, Tregoe said his associasjversfty of Michigan at the
signed by the State Public Utilities
tion advocated the operation of the
services In Kalamazoo for
Commission. The properties will be
banking business under national law.
D. Williams, who was
turned over to thpL^Mlchigan State
There are too many banks, he said,
• Japanese earthquake.
Telephone Co. for the amount of their
and congress should enact a measure
fer presented resolutions of
Indebtedness—$500000 in Battle Creek
under which non-member banks would
this university.
and $63,000 In Marshall.
be denied the privileges of the federal
.¾ #
Marie—Four year-old
Marshall—The county hospital trus- reserve system.
er led his blind father tees have decided to open '.he new
This would have the effect, he belr burning home here Calhoun county hospital, located nine lieved, of not only bringing many
flames crackled all miles west of here, on Detroit-Chi- banks into that system but would also
The fire was discov- cago trunk line pike, December 1. contribute to winding up the affairs
d, who ruBhed to his They will ask the board of supervisors of those not required.
his hand, and the for appropriation of $30 000 to operate
their way through the the hospital the coming year. The
door.
new edifice cost $260,000.
BUILDING BOOM KEEPING UP
Elmlra—So sharp has been the comAddressing
the
Dr. Frederick A, petition for labor and so urgent the ' Clump Falls To Materialize—Other
director of boys' necessity for completing the harvest
Llnee 8how Decrease.
Legion, asked that farmers In this section have
dollars for been paying as high as $10 a day to
ox veterans. potato diggers. In the Elmlra district j Washington—Industrial employment
$1,000,000 every school was closed and almost conditions at the end o! September
e l the destitute every Inhabitant—manT woman and, were slmost exactly the same as Aui gust 30, on the face of surveys made
veterans In the child—out harvesting potatoes.
Ann Arbor—For the first time in by the department of labor.
for 10 years," he
Out of 65 large cities, the departIts history the University of Michigan
ment's agents reported that employwill
have
a
blind
man
on
its
faculty.
state administrative
ment bad Increased In 28 during Sepised John Balrd, state Paul Mueschke, cf Westfleld. Tex.,
tember
and decreased In 36. Viewing
ilsslouer. to expend who was a student in the graduate
the
situation
in still another way, It
pond at the fish school last year, and is this year conwas
said
the
five out of 14 basfc InHarbor, and $400 tinuing his studies, working for a
dustries had Increased the number of
doctor
of
phylosophy
degree
has
been
at the Hastings
workers employed, while the balance
a old or $8,500 appointed an instructor In English.
r,^
showed
small decreases.
Lansing—Approximately 400 corpor>n of a hatchery at
Lumber,
paper and leather manuInctfucted Balrd to ations are delinquent In the payment
facturers
and
automobile Bhope and
,.|7,0O0 for equlp- of their corporation tax, E. V. Chll- {
railroads
reduced
their working forces.
son. deputy secretary of state, an- ;
"There
were
no
signs of the much
nounced.
Payments are coming in j
heralded
slump
In
building operadaily, however, and it Is likely thai
attention the list will be considerably short- tions," Francis I. Jones, director genthe Board of ened before the names are turned ! eral of the employment service, said
is opening session of over to the attorney-general for col- In summarising the survey. "Building
Ing adjourned for lection.
construct on Is maintaining a steady
lly all of the rural
Battle Creek—Mr* Elisabeth M. C. pace in practically all the larger citlem Michigan have
Merritt 88 years old, one of Battle ies of the country.
one or two weeks that
Creek's first Quakers, died here re(assist In the harvest.
cently. She came here from Phila- TRAIN SMASHES SCHOOL BUS
>r, has been far
delphia as a bride, In June, 1858. She
was first vice-president of the Wocity rate for the men's club, founded 59 years ago; one Eight Children Killed—Six Escape
Desth by Jumping,
!• 1924 state tax. of the organisers of the Woman's
iter, will be $2,868 league, and one of the first directors
as compared with of the Charitable union.
Ravenna, O.—Eight children were
r, it was indicated in
Detroit—The
Rt.
Rev.
Herman
Pace
killed
instantly, a man and a boy
•***•+.
,
^received from tAuditor missionary bishop of Spokane, who were seriously hurt and two others
O. & Fuller showing Kent was elected bishop of the diocese of suffered minor injuries near here
.,
apportionment of the state Michigan on the first ballot at the Thursday when a speeding Pennsyl'ftktf City rate for the county tax special diocesan convention of the vania flier chashed Into a school bus.
was $8-127, and it is ex- Protestant Episcopal church In DeThe tragedy occurred half a mile
t« tfrop this winter to $2,660 troit, has accepted the election. It from Atwater, and three miles from
was announced by Rev. W D. Maxon, j Ravenna.
r-old Evelyn Wis- president of the standing committee
Six of the youngsters escaped the
her sister Marie, 4 of the Episcopal diocese of Michigan. fate of their companions by Jumping
'poison tablets several
Pontiae—Actual wcrk on grading from the rear of the bus.
rfgo which they mistook for for the widening of Woodward ave-1
The official list of dead given out
will Ihe, naysiciens stated nue has been begun by the road cos- shortly before 10 a m. follows: Milgey the nation-wide tractors, who got an order to proceed dred Shaw, 11; Harold Shaw, 9;
Cites their efforts to save with the contract recently awarded Verna Shaw, 2; Thelma Benshoff. 9;
it responsible. Of all the them by the State. Work was begun Margaret Kuntx. 12; Julia Wan elk,
cad letten of suggestions on the Stinchfleld Hill, two miles 13; Ella Stalncke. 14, and Richard
the prescription wired by a south of Pont i c e where the course Sticafi. 8.
specialist woo used several Is to be chanced and the grade lower-'
The injured: Lewis Cllne, 42. drivIf*. The chUd began to re- ed. It win be necessary to fill In a I er, critical condition; Steve Wanclk,
late'the treatment soon after- portion of the 8tinchfield
artificial 11, serious condition; Lawrence 8haw,
tods? woo pronounced Yir- lake, which has long been a place of 8. minor injuries, and Stanley Bencf deegcr.
shoff, 5, minor injuries.
scenic beauty along the route.
bfll of ooaplaiat ebargMarquette With winter near, Marsin has refused to set- quette faces the worst shortage of
To Restore Art of Writing.
tee Michigan-Wisconsin water for power purposes la its hisPhiladelphia—The public schools of
dispute, hoc been filed tory. The municipal dam on Dead the Quaker City are out to beat
s)0 Court River has been so low that all com- "dad's" record as a skilful handAndrew B. nrwsjhartf. mercial power users in the city were writer. And the lessons in niacins;
putt Is larcaasful, the cut off aad current furnished for light- letters - and words, under the new
sum Cf Hurley, W i s , lac sad cookiac only a little more course of study Just Issued, are to
st town la the than 12 hours out of 24. Unless a swing to the tempo of music Instead
wlB beestne a htlehi- heavy rainfall occurs soon there ts a of the whack of the ruler on truckles
probability of a more acute electrical ss they dM la "dad's" day. Teachers
fasciae during the winter. The sitasv for years, say they hare been hesrtnc
sad a f-tloa Is the result of aa uapreeedeated complaints .that attractive, legible
areata la the Upper Peninsula re- handwritiac was becoming a loot
art
NEWS
tf&aasm j«.*wignSM
UNUSUAL HAPPENINGS
AND OTHER BRIEF NEWS
i.a:a;aa cfaSa i
Air Mail for China.
Pekln, China—The Aeronautical Department of the government has decided definitely to Initiate an aerial
service between Pekin and Tientsin.
Malls will be carried on this line, and
postomces at the terminal stations are
now in the course of erection.
Noted Dog Fanoler Dies.
Atlantic City, N. J.—Clem W Crey
e-lnlg, veteran dog fancier of Cincinnati, who made a fortune out of the
invention of the mechanical rabbit
used on dog racing tracks, died here.
He also designed the famous Baldwin
track in California, owned by James
"Lucky" Baldwin.
CAVALRY OUT
IN RIOT CALL
RUHR SEETHING AC FACTORIES
DISCHARGE W O R K M E N BY
THOUSANDS.
STARVATION CONDITION LOOMS
Organized Charity Is Practically Inexistent—Workers Fear Sweat
Shop Method*.
Dossed dorf—Demonstrations by the
unemployed, some of a very threatening character, have already begun In
the Ruhr, following discharge of thousands of workers by the metal Industries.
The occupation authorities here preChinese Bandits Slain.
dict rioting and plundering unless
Pekin—The campaign against ban- something is done immediately to redits la being presced vigorously, ac- lieve the plight of *.he worklea*.
cording to an official FcfreJ^n Office
One of the most serious manifestaannouncement In the last Inw days, tions thus far occurred Thursday in
it Is stated, the bandit chief, Wan- Dusseldorf, when more than 3,000 pergerh, and S3 other outlaws have been sons gathered around the town hall
slain by troops, and In addition, 14 and soon became so menacing that
captured bandits were executed..
the French cavalry and armored oars
were summoned. The use of force,
Old Skeletons Found.
however, was unnecessary.
Paris—Skeletons of two men and a
It is feared the situation of the
woman, believed to date back 15,000 workmen and their families will beyears, have been discovered in the come desperate before the month is
south of France, the men about 6 feet over. The German state authorities
tall; they had been burled facing are powerless to offer relief, as the
east; the Academy of Science ex- Berlin government has decided that
presses the belief the bones are of beginning- Oct 17, all responsibility
for unemployment In the Ruhr will
the Quarternary Period in Geology.
be transferred to the local municipal
authorities
in the occupied area.
Airways Carry Many People.
The
purchasing
value of the unemCleveland—More than 2,600 passenployment
doles
from
Berlin has been
gers, 43 per cent of them women and
severely
curtailed
already
by the dischildren, and 6,000 pounds of freight,
integration
of
the
mark.
The 2,000,were carried between Detroit and
000,000
marks
which
is
the
weekly
Cleveland this summer, without an
dole
to
the
bead
of
a
family
Is
barely
accident, according to officials of the
sufficient
to
buy
bread
for
one
adult
Aeromarlne Airways, Inc. In addition
for
seven
days.
3,000 persons were taken on short
The municipal authorities can do
flights.
nothing because the cities have no Income and the metallurgical plants
344,303 Indians In U. S.
which are laying oft their workers reWashington—The Indian population fuse to be responsible while they have
of the United States, according to no orders for their products.
the latest tabulation of the bureau of
Organized charity Is practically LnIndian affairs, Is 344,302, an increase exislent.
during last year of 1.144. Oklahoma
The situation is made all the more
continues to lead with a total of 119,- serious by the1 belief prevalent among
280. Arizona is second with 43,015. the workers that their employers' conDelaware
reported two Indian In- ditions are not so serious as the lathabitants, and Wt»Bt Virginia seven.
ter claim, and that the Industrialists
are simply maneuvering to Increase
Twsnty-four Children In 25 Years,
working hours, and to clear the way
Paris—The French government has for sweat shop methods throughout
decided to award the gold medal "de the entire district.
la Famllle Francalse" to Mme. Marie
Orasset. of Sermalte-les-Balns. near
Vitry-le-Francois, according to the OUTLAWS BLOW UP MAIL COACH
Matin. In the 25 years of her married life, Mme. Orasset has given KIN Four Trainmen—Get No Loot—
birth to 24 children. Mme. Orasset
Bandits Hid In Mountains.
gave twice birth to twins and once to
triplets.
Redding, Calif—The wooded peaks
of
the Slsklyous, on the border beHighest Cross In World.
tween Oregon and California, are beChicago-—The highest cross In the Ueved to shelter a little group of
world has been placed on the spire of men who held up Southern Pacific
Chicago temple. Towering 660 feet train No. 13, slew three trainmen and
above the ground, the cross, 12 feet the mail clerk and caused injuries to
high and six feet wide, appears but about a score of passengers through
a few inches In dimensions
Huge and explosion whereby they forced
flood lights will illuminate It by night their way Into the mall car.
while the reflection of the sun upon
They got no loot.
the gold leaf covered arms will make
Posses from Oregon and California
It visible for mies in the day time.
counties are seeking them. Among
the posse men are Oregon National
Resume Digging In Tut's Tomb.
Guardsmen.
London—Howard Carter, the AmerProm all available indications, the
ican Egyptologist, left for Luxor and trainmen were shot down in cold
the Valley of the Kings, to resume blood because they recognized the
his excavations at the tomb of Tut- robbers, whom officials believe are
ankhamen. The scientist said he had former railroad employes or men
not the slightest belief that any occult familiar with the operation of trains
influence was responsible for the and with the country around Tunnel
death of the Earl of Carnarvon, who 18, 17 miles south of Ashland, Ore.,
succumbed to fever after discovering where the holdup took place.
the tomb, and that he had no fears
for himself In that direction.
Find Grave of Lincoln's Father.
Janesville. HI.—After years of neglect the graves of Thomas and Nancy
Lincoln, father and stepmother of
Abraham Lincoln, are to be given attention. These unkept mounds, in a
nearby desolate graveyard, are marked only by unchisled stones made
rouch by tourists who have chipped
souvenirs from them.
The Illinois
district of the Lions International has
undertaken to raise funds to erect a
fitting; monument
Brazil Has Deepest Mine.,
New York—The S t John del* Rey
mine in Brazil is the deepest in the
world. Thomas T. Read, supervising
engineer of the TJ. S. Bureau of Mines,
reports to the American Institute of
Mining snd Metallurgical Engineers.
"Among the large number of deep
mines In the world there are several
which do not differ much In depth,"
he says. "The St. John del Rey
mine has reached a vertical depth of
6,72« feet below the top of its shaft
Handcuffs Hla Bride.
New York—When Barle S. Lathain.
Jr., donned his wedding clothes to be
married at the Hotel Marseilles to
Miss Elisabeth Jaaet Burke, of Palisade Park. N. 3., he slipped a pair of
handcuffs into his trousers pocket sad
a wedding band into the other pocket.
Mr. T At ham remembered threat* made
by chums to kidnap the bride, so, fallowing the ceremoay. the younc benedict—he Is only 21—-snapped the
handcuffs oa his bride aad himself
sad foiled the "kidnappers,"
RAINS QUENCH FOREST FIRES
Situation In Upper Peninsula Is
Relieved by Heavy Downpour.
Ontonagon—Heavy rains which fell
at Intervals, Thursday, and a lowhanging, damp fog aided firefighters
In this part of Michigan who had
fought three days, to control forest
fires menacing their homes. The situation was considered serious, but
authorities believed most towns were
out of danger.
Winds off Lake Superior, had fanned the flames into dangerous propor
tfons, but they brought rains clouds
over the district
Superior, Wis,—Rain. v which began
falling in this section Thursday, saved
the settlement of Dairy Farm, in
Douglas county, the fire had completely encircled the little settlement
and cut off all communication with
the. outside. The rains, however,
stopped the progress of the fires.
New Speeies of Spider* Pound.
Denver. Colo.—A new species of
spiders, with bodies like foot balls
and eight long legs, pink aad striped
with black, have made their appear,
aace In Denver, accordinf to A. E.
Craig, who has captured maay of
them. The insects have wide nostrils,
slit eyes, small mouths aad ears, aad
were discovered ta a shed owaed by
Craig. The spiders are beOeved ta
have been brought here hi tropica'
trutt aad escaped ta snake their hoau
la the shed.
ous one, and one to which
able honor attaches, bat the towa
ator Is chairman of s powartat
mittee, and it Is said he does net
for presiding honors, If they e n ta>
interfere with his duties ss ccauatV
tee chairman. He may aot take vn*>
high chair in the senate If by the*
transfer he has to lose the head chair
REPORT THAT HE HAD TURNED at the committee table
The presiding officer of the senate.
AGAINST NATIONS' LEAGUE
whether
he is the vice president er
CAUSED EXCITEMENT.
merely a president pro tern, does ant
have much to do but sit aad
fairly wise. Occasionally he gets
FLATLY DENIED BY SENATOR of sitting aad wanders oat, but I
most of the time he Is compelled S»
sMck in hie place and listen to dreary
Polities is Now the Chief Subject of debates or to repeat time after tun*
Discussion
in Washington Beth ss bills reach a certain stage the
National Committee Chairman Ts word "calendar," or else to confine hla
vocal exercises to giving verbal exHeld Their Place*.
pression to the fact that the senator
from New York or some other
By EDWARD B. CLARK
state
has been recognised. NevertheWashington.—Politics In Washingless
the
office of president pro t e a «1
ton was enlivened a bit the other day
the
senate
is not to be despised. U
when the newspapers carried two
stories cheek by jowl, one telling of s has been held by several men who bespeech by Senator Oscar W. Under* came great In the country's history.
Frye In Chair Many Years.
wood of Alabama, announced candiSenator
William P. Frye of Maine
date for the Democratic pom I nation
was
presiding
officer of the senarn
for the presidency, and the other givfor
a
great
many
years. He nusnaaai
ing account of a speech by Samuel M.
to
perform
the
duties
of head officer
Ralston of Indiana, also a candidate
and
at
the
same
time
carry on Aa
for Democratic honors.
work
attached
to
the
office
of chairIn the story of the speech by Mr.
man
of
the
great
senate
committee
Underwood It was said he had gives
over his allegiance to the League of on commerce. Benator Frye was aa
Nations. In the story of the speech by Indefatigable worker, sad he was not*
sir. Ralston It was said he reaffirmed in his tatter years s strong man physically. He died st bis home m Maine
his belief in the league.
It took only about twenty-four 12 years ago, just after he had closed]
hours for a denial to arrive of the his work at a senate session of on>
truth of the story of the Underwood usual Interest snd strenuous activity.
There Is rather an interesting story
speech. The Alabama senator reconnected
with the time of Senate*
pudiated in toto the report of his adPrye's
occupancy
of the office of presdress. He said his belief in the league
ident
pro
tern
of
the
senate He was
was what it always had been and that
chosen
to
the
place
immediately
after
he was still its staunch supporter.
the
election
of
McKlniey
and
Hobart,
The League of Nations, despite recent
happenings, probably will be very in 1896. Mr. Hobart became vice
much of s fsctor In the coming nom- president and Benator Frye used to
ination campaign and, of course, in the take his place in the chair on the
election campaign which is to follow. occasion of Mr. H chart's absence.
As everybody knows, the Democrats, They became strong personal friends.
Vice President Hobart died la office
like the Republicans, have their ranks
and
then Senator Frye became the
split on the general subject of trying
actual
presiding officer of the senate.
to find some means to aid Europe, but
His
friendship
with Vice President
there are many more League of NaHobart
had
brought
the families of
tlonltes In the Democratic party, or
tbe
two
men
Into
social
relations. A
seemingly so, at least, than there are
daughter
of
Senator
Frye,
president
in the Republican party.
pro tern of the senate, married a son
All Looking for Excitement
of Garret A. Hobart, vice president of
It Is easy enough to understand the
the United States and presiding officer
excitement which followed the story
of the senate.
that Mr. Underwood hud repudiated
There are several
Hobart-Frye
the league. It was said by some Democrats that this repudiation meant bis frrandchlldren who can claim the hondefeat for the nomination. It cakes a or of being descendants of two meo
denial of a story a long time to catch who at the same time were presiding
up with the story Itself. Sometimes officers of the United States.
Plenty of Candidates.
It never catches up, but, of course,
if
Senator
Cummins,.shall decline)
Mr. Underwood's friends are hoping
the
honor
of
preferment
for the posifor the bent. Politics will be the chief
subject of discussion in this town from tion of president pro tern of the sennow until the election, one year from ate, there will be no difficulty in seNovember, and now that the heat of lecting a man for the place because of
the summer is past with its general lack of candidates. Of course, the
accompanying dullness, it perhaps can next presiding officer will be s Rebe readily understood with what avid- publican, because tbe Republicans
ity In cool weather the politicians have control of the senate. The only
seized upon the Underwood-Ralstoo In- senators who will not aspire to the
cldent for street, otfice and closet con- honor are those whose committees
are important enough to lead them to
versation.
The Republicans are having some believe that their work as committee
interesting discussions of their own on en airmen is of greater Importance
this thing and that thing these days, than the work of presiding over the
A Republican leader the other day de- senate, which in effect Is not much
livered himself of a statement to the work, but largely a place of honor.
effect that President Coolldge was bePresiding officers of the senate fretween the devil und the deep sea in quently, to put It slanglly. are bored
the World court matter. The Intima- stiff. They are compelled by sheer
tion was, of course, that If the Presi- sense of duty to listen to all the
dent followed his own beliefs In the speeches which senators seem desirmatter he would lose politically; that ous to deliver. Thej are many times
the devil of anti-court would get him on in the United States senate when the
the one side or the deep sea of the only listeners to some senator's adcourt on the other, unless be com- dress are the presiding officer, the
promised.
leader of each political party In the
Some of the President's friends were senate, and a handful of persons Is
angry at this statement of the Re- tbe gallery.
publican leader, for they said that In
a way It was an insult to suggest that
Fate.
any President of the United States for
It Is a strange fact that since the
purely political purposes would fall to death of President Taylor of the
follow his own convictions In any mat- United States every fourth president
ter and would be deterred from doing has died a sudden death. After Taylor, the twelfth president, there were
right by any fear for his future.
Fillmore, Pierce, Buchanan and LinNational Chairmen to Stay.
The chairmen of the two great na- coln. President Lincoln was assassitional party committees seemingly are nated while attending a theater. Then
to stay put on their Jobs until the came Johnson. Grant Hayes and Oarconventions meet This much seems to field. President Garfield was also asbe assured, notwithstanding the fact sassinated. Arthur, Cleveland, Hanithat rumors have been flying about son and McKlniey, who was the third
that Chairman Hall of the uemocratlc United States president to be assassicommittee was not entirely acceptable nated. Then followed Roosevelt, TafL
to many of the Democratic brethren Wilson and President Harding, who
and that Chairman Adams of the Re- died a natural but sudden death.
publican committee was, as the saying
Has Highbrow Taxi Drivers.
goes, "In bad" with a good many ReIt will be correct to tip the taxi
publicans of high estate.
A national committee rarely or nev- driver when you visit Chicago, but it's
er removes Its chairman. Probablj It unsafe to try to Impress him with
c a n t Chairmen are supposed to stay highbrow stuff.
JSlx drivers for one single cab comin office until the national conventions meet, when their successors are pany, it Just comes to light are docnamed. Nobody knows who will be the tors of philosophy. About fifty others
successor of either of the men now In are bachelors of something or other, of
colleges and universities.
high committee place.
The city pays more to ride In s taxiWhen tbe conventions meet snd the
cab
than to be taken by the hand of
president Is I candidates sre named,
scholarship
and led along the bumpy
each candidate expresses bis desire in
the matter of s national committee road of learning.—Detroit News,
chairman. If the Republican nominee
First Love.
next year wants Mr, Adams to hang
"Fyscfae seems greatly attached e»
on. bell hang on, and If the Democratic nominee wants Mr. Hull to bang thst car of his,"
"Unfortunately, however, one at ntt
on. he'll hang on.
creditors
has just displayed aa seen]
Who Will Preside Over Senate?
greater
attachment"—Judge.
There Is speculation in Washington ss to the Identity of the
Put to Oood Use.
next president pro tern of the UniNewsboy—Why do you always hay
ted States senate. Senator Cummins
of Iowa was the presiding officer tbe widest newspaper on the stand?
Broker—It's wonderful nretacihai ta
la the absence of the vice preside**
for some time, but now that the vice bide behind when a wossaa Is
president has become President the lag In the street car.
president pro tern la effect will be tbe
Water
president permanent of the senate. It
A cork that has
is said thst Senator Cummins is aot
over aaxJous for s contlnaatloa of the feet below the surface at the
win net rise again swing as .as
honor which has been his.
sure of the
The place la a way Is a
STIRRED 'EM UP
, * / .,
•vfc*
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH
mmm
SS HOMES
MADE HAPPY
ittleOnesaGreat Blessing
•THEKITCHEN
CABINET
/94BB2
Hjj, 1>I3. VVmcrn .S'ew.iNL(t«r Lnius )
Den
Is my friend, yet from my
fo« aa from my friend c o m A
good:
My friend s h o w s w h a t 1 fan do,
and my foe what I xtiould.
—JSciiiUer.
Four Interesting Letters
« _ _ N . T . - - 1 took LyettaB.
M f c a m ' a Vegetable Compound be>
11 W M weak u d wanted to beetroof *od b a r e a child. My
koebaad read about i t ia tba'Cortknd
Standard' and thought it might help
m * I t « r t * i n l y d f l f o r l oowh«T#
ekrrerr boy fifteen month* old who
weigh* forty pound*. I recommend
L y d u E . Pmkbam'a Vegetable Cornpoond to my M e a d e and TOO can cerin your littotally oae my teal.
tle booka
and iin
a tthe
b e newspaper*,
' iaad
newspaper*, aa
aa
It might help to make BOOM other
dUkUeae home happy by the preaence
of little onea aa it baa dofjemtoe.''—
Mr* C L A U D S P. C A N F X B A W Saltat o r y 8 L , Cortland, N . Y.
A Message to Mothers
Hamilton, Ohio.— M I have known
about Lydia £ Pmkaam's Vegetable
Compound d a c e girlhood. W i n g
taken i t wbea I waayounger and Buffering from a weakaeaa and backache/ Lately I have takea it again
to strengthen me before the birth or
my child aa I was troubled with peine
m my back and a Hfaleea, weak feelI think if mothere would only
i TOOT wonderful medicine they
would notdread childbirth at t h e ; do.
I recommend the Vegetable Compound to every wccnea-"—Mrawo*
E u X m , J R T 668 8 . 11th Street.
BamOtoo. Ohio.
¾
8 t Louie, M a - ^ I wmat to tell yea
whet Lydia E. Pmkbam'a Vegetable
Compound did for me aeron yeara
ago. I waa run down and had a weakaeaa each aa women often have. I
took Lydia E. Pinkbam'a Vegetable
Compound and after being married
sixteen yeara became the mother of
a s w e e t little girL I BOW h a r e four
lovely children—three fine boys and
the Bttle girl atx yeara old. I had
longed for children all the while and
wept many a day and envied every
woman with a child. I waa 8S yeara
old when my first baby waa born. I
recomm end Lydia E. Plnkham 'a Vegetable Compound to any woman wne
is ailing with female Weakaeaa."—
M n . J. N A U B U N N , 1617 Beaton St.,
fit Louii, M a
W M Weak and Rim Down
St. Louie, M a - " My mother took
Lydia £ . Pinkham'e Vegetable Compound when I waa a girl, and when I
waa troubled with cramps I took it,
and later when I married I again took
it to make m e atroftg aa the doctor
said I waa weak ana run down and
could not have children. 1 took it and
got along fine and now I nave three
glrla. So you know why 1 keep the
Compound In the bouse. I am a well
woman and do my work and sewing
t o o . " - M r * . J U L I U S HABTMAM, 26QX
W. Dodier S t * St. Louie, Mo.
An Egyptologist.
Miss Blusox—Are you interested In
Egyptian scarabs, Mr. Llttleneck?
Mr. Llttleneck—Intensely Interested,
Miss Bluaor.
They're my favorite
smoke.
United States Armed Fores Increased.
The only Important power which baa
actually increased Its anned forces
since 1913 Is the United States, the
figure* having risen from 88.000 in that
year to 137.000 In 1922.
It Doesnt Last Long, Though.
Radio—Do you know what a makeup box Is?
Fan—Yes, a box of chocolates.
Downtown Food.
A good wife is gratified by hearing
her grownup folks scold about the
food they "have to eat" downtown.
The autumn days hold much of In
tereat and churin for the woman of
fashion, having in them all the fascination of the undisclosed and the excitement of discovering what is to he
worn. With Indian summer hovering,
writes a fashion correspondent lu the
New York Times, the shore and the
mountain pluces lure society later
each year, reluctant to leave the outof-doors fur the exactions of life in
town. Half the social world Bailed
this summer to the other side, creating for Purls and London a seiuton
more brilliant than any since the prewar days.
The American element of wealth
and fashion abroad in holiday mood,
augmented by an army of couturiers, designers and artists, contributed most, it is admitted, to this
gayety; for the French women, even
A most tasty pickle which is not
very common is prepared with fjreeti
cucumbers.
Fill a Jar
with the small cucumbers, well washed and
*ouked in ice wuter to
have them crisp; add a
slice or two of onh-n und
four stulks of celery to
each can; now till the
Jar with
boiling
hot
vinegar, usin« a halfcupful of suynr to each
quart Jar. Seal and *el
away to season.
Chili Sauce.—Take fifty mediumsized ripe tomatoes, half as many onions, four red peppers, see*is and fl>»er
removed; one small hunch of celery,
SBBBBBB^sV
one quart of vinegar, one tublesjHxinful each of whole allspice, whole
cloves, with the heads removed, whole
cinnamon, three cupfuls of sugar, two
tablespoonfuls of salt and one grated
nutmeg. Scald and peel and chop the
tomatoes and put them to drain In a.
colander. Chop all the vegetables, tie
/aWST V'lTsalBl^B^SX
\ ISBBBBSl
the spices In a small cheesecloth bag
and cook all together for two and onehalf hours. Fill in bottles while hot
and seal airtight.
Uncooked Tomato Relish.—Take a
peck of ripe tomatoes, peel and chop
and drain in a colander.
When
drained add two cupfuls each of
chopped celery and onions, four red
peppers, two cupfuls of augur, one
cupful of mustard seed, one-half cupful of salt, one teaspoonful of black
pepper, one teaspoonful of paprika.
Mir well and fill jars to overflowing.
Seal and keep in a cool place. Keady
to be used in six weeks.
Green Tomato
Mincemeat.—There
are any number of people who are
very fond of this kind of mincemeat.
Chop a peck of preen tomatoes, add a
^BBBBBsMsBsffliBf
\
few apples, five pounds of siitrar, two
pounds nf raisins and currants, one
/ '
1
11
and one-half pounds of suet, one cupful of vlnegitr, two tahlespoonfuls each
of salt, allspice and cinnamon, one and
one-half tahlespoonfuls of grated nutmeg. Mix the salt with the tomatoes
and let stand over niplit. In the morn- I Brown Kasha Cloth Street Dress W i t h
ing drain off the juice and mix with
Tight Bodice, Choker Collar - n d
the other Ingredients; boil for a halfSable-Banded Full Skirt. Cape One
hour and seal while hot. This makes
of Latest Cut.
seven quarts.
the I'arlslonnes, appear nowadays noticeably subdued in their attire beside
On* s h i p g o e s e a s t and a n o t h e r
the American visitors.
west
W h i l e the s e l f - s a m e b r p e i e s b l o w ;
The intimacy and acquaintance with
It's the net of the nails and not
the Inner workings of the European
the g a l e s
fashlon-mnklng world, created by presThat bid them w h e r e to go.
ent-day travel, has given American
LJke t h e winds of the air are the
women first-hand knowledge of forw a y * of the fates
eign
valuation of our patronage. They
As we Journey along 1 t h r o u g h
find
that
the first styles. Hashes In the
life:
pan. as it were, are designed to catch
It's the set of the soul t h a t d e c i d e s
the goal,
the fancy of tourists—a large number
And not the s t o r m s or the strife.
of whom tnke without question whatever bears the Paris label. These
SEASONABLE FOODS
makes In gowns, wraps and millinery
flood the market, and the merchants
As the wild fowl and other game are over here emulate their example.
to be had at this season it Is well to
To this side of the water are comconsider a
few ing alone, quickly now, models from
ways of preparing the ateliers of Worth. Bernard, Lanand serving
it. vln. Jenny and the other prominent esWild duck, rice tablishments.
They will answer the
hens and
birds requirements for the
Intermediate
that
eat
both weeks, these gowns and mediumgrains and
fish weight wraps for the days of chill and
are often rather mist that mark the coming of winter.
garaey In flavor. An advance style about the acceptance
To remove some of the strong flavor, of which there seems to be no slightparboil them In water to which has est hesitancy is the coat dress. It Is
been added a sliced carrot, an onion really Just the one-piece gown, already
or two sliced, and a half bunch of found to be so comfortable, and to
celery. When tender remove and fry serve for so many different occasions.
brown in deep fat, using butter and Bat the coat form, as if no other wrap
lard; season well and serve with sliced was needed, ma Ires It especially suitoranges and French dressing for a able for fall street wear. Made quite
salad, or with finely shredded cabbage simply, rff any of the new woolens,
dressed with sugar, vinegar and rich worn with a fur scarf, or trimmed
cream. Drop the cabbage after shred- with fur, its popularity Is certain.
ding in cold water to become crisp,
Wide Latitude In Styles.
then drain, add the seasoning of s a l t
A New York modiste is showing a
sugar and vinegar and enough cream charming gown in kasha cloth, cinnato make a good dressing.
mon brown, fashioned In tiers, though
A young fowl after parboiling may straight In line; belt less, the walat
be roasted until brown in a hot oven. forming an etoo effect. This and each
Brush with butter and roast with an fiat flounce, of which there are three
onion or a piece of celery In the cavity on the skirt, being edged with a nar.
of each, which la removed before serv- row fringe of monkey fur in natural
ing.
color. Obviously, there will be a wide
Apple, Onion Salad.—Take s slice latitude in styles, particularly In th*
or two of Spanish onion, chop fine all-around wool gown, for plain mateand add to half a doien finely diced rials, untrlmmed. are equally as good
apples and a cupful of minced dates. aa those of bold plaid and those that
Season with salt and dress with are trimmed, some very elaborately.
any good boiled dressing. Serve on This diversity Is evident In frocks for
lettuce leaves or garnish with a bit of every possible occasion.
parsley.
In the psychology of modern dreea.
Los Angeles Dressing.—Beat four egg It Is usual to apeak of the "Influence"
yolks, add one-fourth of a cupful of ! of this or that Innovation.
Modes
olive oil, one tablespoonful of lemon swung so long in circles, never departJuice, one and one-half tahlespoonfuls ing from the conventional, that latterof vinegar, one teaspoonful each of 17. having taken flight, they have gone
mustard and salt, a dash of cayenne. far in the search for novelty. No gown
Cook in s double boiler, stirring well Is considered really swagger unles It
until the mixture thickens. Chill and shows an "Influence" or evidence of
add a cupful of heavy cream beaten tradition.
stiff and one and one-half tableapoonIt moat be Chinese or Persian, or
fuls of grated horseradish.
Egyptian, or Russian, ant* the adaptaPeach Dumpling,—Roll oat a rtch tion of type in line and color to up-topastry and rot ffito squares large date requirements Is sometimes starenough to hold a peeled peach. Wrap tling in the extreme. Designers have
and pinch the edges, place In a baking delved deep Into the treasure houses
dish and bake until the crust ia brown. of faraway countries and peoples for
Serve with a hot aaoce of peaches Inaptratton, and have taken their mocrttahed and cooked In auger until a tifs from palace walla, from kings'
thick sauce la made. Pour over the rebea, aad even from ruins and tombs,
hot aaoce or serve with cream and IB their endeavor to add significance
auger.
to the dress of today.
Half a century ago, lace, embroidery.
fringe and guipure) ware the trimmings
st the command of the dressmaker.
Like
\
at the Sun
Looking into one of the huge rotary kilns where the raw materials
for cement are burned into clinker
is just like looking at the noonday
sun.
The terrific heat required makes
a glare o! light so intense that the
glowing flame would temporarily
blind you.
But borrow the workman's colored
goggles to protect your eyes while
you take another look into the kiln.
Then you will see a tornado of
powdered coal—or gas or spraying
oil—bursting into a sheet of sunwhite flame.
Into the other end of the kiln flow
the powdered limestone and shale
[clay]—the raw materials for cement.
As the slowly revolving kiln tumbles the
materials about, they ire subjectedtogradually increasing heat During their three-hour
Journey through this inferno, moisture and
gasea arefirstgiven ofLFinaUy as the powdered
materials reach the sunwhiteflame,they hall
melt into glass-hard baQs called "clinker,"
• This clinker, an entirely new chemical compound, when finely powdered is portland
cement,
Portland cement kilns consume greet
quantifies of fuel—30 pounds of coal or its
equivalent lor each 94-pound sack of cement.
For the whole cement making process the
consumption of coal is approximately 50
pounds a sack—more than half a ton of coal
to a ton of cement.
PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION
ill West wWuagtoo Street
CHICAGO
llktUm if Cmtiw*
rYeat
| W h e n n e e d l e w o r k w a s i n t r o d u c e d It
[ w a s t h e tine, d a i n t y work of
the
I F r e n c h and I t a l i a n s or t h e more or1 n a t e of t h e G e r m a n s , stereotyi»ed to
ttie liUJt d e g r e e . Any o n e In t h o s e d a y s
[ w h o e l a b o r a t e d her g a r m e n t s in any
oilier m a n n e r w a s r e g a r d e d a s eccentric. Gradually, t h e n e e d l e w o r k e r s of
other c o u n t r i e s , n o t a b l y A r m e n i a , Hussla, H u n g a r y , C z e c h o s l o v a k i a , S w e d e n ,
have found a m a r k e t here for their
handicraft, and now t h e s e h a v e an e s t a b l i s h e d vogue.
T h i s y e a r t h e r e la a vital "feeling"
for R u s s i a n . It w a s s e e n in the summer b l o u s e s and o n e - p i e c e f r o c k s and
is e v e n m o r e m a r k e d in t h e a u t u m n
styles.
S o m e t h i n g in R u s s i a n dreiw
I m p r e s s e s w i t h Its definite c h a r a c t e r .
It h a s a d a s h and g o , a s t a t e l l n e s s , an
e x t r a v a g a n c e , as c o m p e l l i n g as the
m u s i c of t h e c o u n t r y , its Cossack
h o r s e m a n s h i p , Us p o l k a s a n d mazurk a s ; and t h e most e n t e r p r i s i n g imp o r t e r s are m a k i n g a s t r o n g appeal
with everything Itusslan.
x
SAY "BAYER" when you buy.
Of m a n y c r e a t i o n s c o m i n g from the
most n o t a b l e h o u s e s In P a r i s s o m e a r e
u n u s u a l l y a t t r a c t i v e . One model equally a p p r o p r i a t e for s t r e e t ami Indoor
w e a r is m a d e of dark blue Poiret twill.
In t w o s e c t i o n s . (Mi t h e p r i n c e s s slip of
silk a r e built the n a r r o w s k i r t , and
waistcoat.
T h e s e a r e h e a v i l y faced
with a h i e r o g l y p h i c p a t t e r n In dull old
gold and black braid, an inch and a
q u a r t e r wide.
T h i s braid also t r i m s
the neck, s l e e v e s , front and bottom of
the tunic, w h i c h s l i p * over, and which
is very straight, a l t o g e t h e r Russian in
design
T h i s new t r e a t m e n t by outlining the dresK rill around is a c c e p t e d
without fear of c u t t i n g the length of
the figure u n b e c o m i n g l y .
An a t t r a c t i v e c a p e is introduced In
an e n g a g i n g model.
T h e c o s t u m e is
m a d e •"' brown kn-dia "cloth In a s t y l e
that d e p a r t s from the more conventional tunic. The Inidlce Is light, with
a c h o k e r c«|lnr, am] the full skirt Is
w e i g h t e d with a band of
Uusvjun
snide. One can almost wee small Kus
slim boots worn with this outfit.
T h e robe d'lnlereur, as the French
say, Is s t u n n i n g for a f t e r n o o n weur. It
Is built of black, " U a l l e y " kn«ha. ami
the embroidery Is d o n e [n vis Id colors
with much gold thread. T h e s l e e s e Is
one of the best a m o n g the late models,
fairly wide, straight, and is caught
Into a hand, SIIUK at the band.
T h e R u s s i a n turban has been I n t r o
duced s e a s o n after s e a s o n ,
ulwsys
w i t h s u c c e s s for Its p i c t u r e s q u e quality and general b e c o m l n g n e s s .
As
s t y l e s h a v e d e v e l o p e d a l o n g bolder
lines, the R u s s i a n turban or toque has
grown
Into
something
exceedingly
s^iart. Comparing t h e modern version
Wk
•d
__
Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proffc
H&ndj "Bayer" boxes of 12 Ubleta— Also bottles of 14 aaaV
AspUle to tt* Bt*t SMTS mi Bvm MMoXactu* «f
Two pleasant ways
to relieve a cough,
Take your choice sad suit
your taste. SB—or Menthol
flavor. A sure relief for coughs,
colds and boaxienese. Put one
i o your mouth a t bedtime.
AJway k—p * box o n hmnd.
SMITH BROTH
SB.
COUCH DROPS
Famous sJnee 1647
The People Themselves.
At an agricultural show In IMinlin s
p o m p o u s member of parliament, who
arrived late, found himself on t h e outs k i r t s of H huk'e cri»H(l.
ISein^' a n x i o u s t<> ohtiiln a pood view,
and iireMimint: licit he \\i\* well known
to t h e s p e c t a t o r s , he l a p p e d n m;in on
the shoulder and o r d e r e d : "Make way
there '"
"<iarn' Who are ye piishln'?" w a s
the u n e x p e c t e d reply.
"I'n vim know who I am. sir?" cried
the Indlcnuni M I'. "I'm a representative of I lie people '"
" Y a h ! " prowled the o t h e r ; ''hut
we're the hloomin' people t h e m s e l v e s . "
What
He Intended.
"My dear," said the new | ymnrrled
man to his wife, "where did all fhe*e
hooks on ant ronniny cmiie from? They
are not mirs."
"A pleasant little surprise for you,"
remarked his wife.
"You know, my
dear, you said this morning (hat we
ought to study iistronotny; and so I
went to the bookseller's and bought
everything I could on the subject."
It wus some minutes before he
spoke,
"My dear," he unld then, his voice
husky with emotion, "I never said we
must study astronomy; I said we must
study economy."
Back to the Source.
Mrs. Newlywed (tparftitly, after complaints about sponge c a k e ) - - I f s the
wretched druglst's fault—he roust
have given Die the wrong k-klnd of
sponfes!
Odd Musical li
The ordinary handsa
as s musical tnstflMBf
after novelties U4M ft ,
After long exj
practice he has a<
petting an
tool.
l i e holds the saw hi
Ids leps, holds the tipone hand, and works
how with the other.
steel blade emits soft,
the pitch of which 1«
inp the curvnture of \M§]
sorts of queer effecta
adept
manipulation
Sometimes the mufllc
hutiiHn voice; again tt
wail of the Hawaiian ul
No Mere Wt
Once upon n t i n e
thlnp for fulrlaa te
I nown to mortala.
mortal was granted
so on. The
penred to a
For serrteea
the custoaMI
that he hat
"Nnme It,"
"(let me a
since then
pesratf H
Moat
money tf ttsst/ b
enough t» M r *
— i
Many a »«* at
ary thlnfa In hla
Whyt
the risl
^ p "
>.
ANY hsve found by
experience) that coffee's
harmful. Health author "
against risking the growth
opment of children with
tnent in coffee.
»
Why take chances wit*
and thus risk comfoa%
M
Costume
Dark
With
Black
There's both safety
Postum as yourroeaftSjMrtJrinltift
thoroughly enjoy its defigfttfal
and aroma. Postum contains
that can harm you. As many;
you like at any meal—with
ties to pay m wakeful nights and
time dullness.
fer Street or Indoor Wear of
Blue Poiret Twill. Trimmed
Dull Gold embroidery and
Braid.
with the original headdress of royalty, some possibilities of elaboration
still remain unexpressed.
Parts guards her most precious secret* jealously, gives them out reluctantly and for a big price to the world
at large. It la perhaps a little early
to prophesy aafely what the most succetaful atylea of the season will finally
be, but it la possible to arrive at some
general conclusions. That the silhouette will be straight, curveleaa, tubelike la repeated with emphasis.
Ia
thla the girl of slender, even she with
the coveted boyish figure, haa much
the best of It But It ia the task of
the modiste to give to her patron who
Inclines to embonpoint and maturer
lines as nearly aa pesslhle the same
appearance. There ia no longer any
excuae nor any forgiveness far moyen
age in dress or figure-—not this side of
ity.
Year grecer aeOa Faunas In twofera
P o e n a (In Una) prepared inetamrr
by the eddMoa el boin&c watac ~
(ia packafea) for those who praft
bron* at ewt by boJHaf fa By M eaiaert
4 l C R B B Y f o W l sB SjBOttt 00^1¾¾¾¾ 4eVBt
J
iJi jSkMt^
JAl.i
Proved safe by millions and prescribed bj
Colds
Headache
Neuritis
Pain
Toothache
Neurilfia
T h e cout d r e s s , t h e tunic, or Hus
sian blou.se dress, h a s ureal possibilities.
F u r t r i m m e d , It Is effective for
s t r e e t weur.
For t h e Interior it Is
often h e a v i l y o r n a m e n t e d with Czech
n e e d l e w o r k . In c o l o r s that are invariably brilliant.
Dark Blue P o i r e t T w i l l .
1L
U \ V\ \
IT
f
I
PiCKLIN' TIME
Influence of All
Nations in Dress
« A i Ti'i • l
£i*#*
•V'2T"' •••-'- 4jS
i~t
FOP
,-^
HlVH
y
CN3
•Itai***
.,4,
•*V£
^...:
<o*P
\ ; .:,-.
t
•
, ,.•
- . -
PINCKNKY DISPATCH
•
*
&
»
;
ilovi-r
* t
B r a O D T
"
u C
seed c r o p
* euttiujf.s
is 7u i I T CI r t
w
hllcsd
KIEP WATCH FdH aflSTT&Y
><•
!
Looki!-:nC',-i:.s
A'-
* ' " a n d ' h e ..» : i . . . .
ritieh
Majority
of People e f t h e
I ales on t h e Keen L o o k o u t f o r
|
Phenomenon.
.<•« "
iusual
(I)li'
to
slow
n u t ii r i f u ,
.i • *
i
•*»'' <*Ujn»r beets |-A ,-,,tln-r in > e p t e m b c r , m d .short ..m ,-t
T
b
e
f«(l
of
t
h
e
moment
i
n
K
I
I
K
I
H
H
1
•
•r<»j>^ were U n - j - . b o r .
T h e present c o n d i t i o n pr.my.es
>;-r d i n s . H o w - , t- ri>i i o f l l o , i ) i i o l i - i - J i r K , o r I ' l i i . i a i n , i s vv ;i f i - h u . ; ' f o r r h p ( ; r c * T i r « > f r o m
' b « ' Ml-'i u ' l i i c t i j s s h o t i m t f o r » - e c i n n i
f$«^ e ^ h e r delayed i . i s h e l . s l c ^ s t h a n p r m i u c i i i i n I '>-'J.
I5ealis:
I . a l e b e , i n s . w e In m - l i i t
° ' ' ''•'•"
.)>!>' a > t h e r i m i f ] »;i [ i | . .. I » h e
[y.6»rv€«tinjj o f late
ii.r .jUitc
,,s ' " "
' h > - l a - r i / j i t i . • V i m m a y a l > , , ><•,.
d x m a g e WHS done v r . s t e d . T h e M I - , l i s „ i
o f h a r v e s t i n g at lHHtd iv> f r o m t h e c . w ' \ ,
|,. . , n d d , . i - l 1 " ' > n i , ' >
i.Ui H i m ^n-eii
or liluishI**"'• A h e a v y f r o s t i n p a p u r t o f S e p t c . l i . r r . . i : , s d n l c m
K T e i - n ; h u t l l I s i l l , - rt;,>|i > o u >h<>ul • 1
«f>,S*|»teinh*r i n , i d e r , d > l e d a m a g e « , : . ^ , . , • . , u i t u r. ., M -.i *'^^>
f o r . T h o S e t s in T ! I P ^ . v - t e r n
l e r n I f k f r i i r a n and a u n i . M w r e c , m t e u t . , i , d t u v ' i . c | „ ,,•<•.,(
H i - t i l ^ i , , K k m , v t l,t- ^ r c - n t l . i s t i .
Tlm>
e f n p p l n j r f o r t h I T • i c e ,,J' p i c k ; ,'i . I i ' s i , ! ' j Q r i , , ) „ . , • | e t n - r . s ) j tt h e h e f t h ; u ; j n y ( M T M O I w i n
,,f j [
b;i.s M , i. i f h o i n i i i y k n u . i s h l > o r I n n
' .ln'*Nie' r<yrt" ni > .<(- .n,. j • i i r\ .s!n , w H I ,i> n . i
v ,,.|,|
t>,lWl
p»rt o f the State I
v,r.i-i- pick
' u ' i i r I ' b n ' . c a n Or? , l e « i r l y i u l O f i n
(-,-1 s I u-r . u I e .t r i l l . i I
r*e f r o m f r o s t up to u l s p r r c e n t .
T h e ' icUis s w > t r u m I'i'i.i'is o f o t b o r s .
m o n t h a n d all crops ; n , , i u T . i . : r " I •) , m i i V b i i - l i c ! s p e r . i e r e
I " u : i s ; s i>\ii- (in- i i n u - . l i
es :, r e
.$.KbrvrKI
-s | d r j i , , . r
l-ut
•
tli.in
t h e season.
cxpivtai
1I a nentin/
i •>
thii
k
H'
4*0*11 th*tt fau.se ;ii' i n t h e p o o r e s t . s e c t i o n s ; , , . , n . U I ' M L T u t
r e p o r t issueo I ' t o j n I m . s h e l s i n [ h e I d s t Jo< ( i h t l e s .
b^Vth, Atfricul
I n d U l d i i a l \ l e ' n \ s o f '.'."i m d ."io l i i i s h c l s
L W h i t n e y Wat
per . o r e h ; i \ e b e e n r e p o r t e d f r o m se\
Agriculture.
r r 11 c o n : i t l e v
ie e o r » erop deI he
,| i p l e c r o p
h , - ) , r o \ e i l i i i s., ] .
>e-lmlf million ] i i ' i n l u i / i n s o m e r e s p e * - t s . D o - I r m l
r
v 'September
I. i n l u . i n v o r i ' b a r d s i s u n d e r s w e . , n i l ..
ith# ears more •il . . . i ! e r p e r c e n t ; , ^ e t h a n e x p e c t e d \ w , l
Injured the j i r . i d e a t N ' u m b e r I .
A p h i s d i d , ••;:
ier of l i m n - % i ; | e r « h l e I I I I I I I , ; ' ! ' i n t h e s o i i l i o . - . t e r n
i t e is 5 * , " '
' n u l l ! ies
T b e c r o p ,is .. -,\ I i , ,!,• i> ,;
free
from
si.iij.
I..ibur
r
llpiti
*'. r "J' ' a s t u s i n d l v
"the y i e l d w i l l be v i r c e . t r i l l t h e p r i c e o f . i p p i c . s i •• ! , , v. .
»t o f 1 9 * 2 .
M u c h f r u i t w i l l lie sold i n h u l k , m.ide
liul inquiry rela- i n t o e i d e r , o r r e m a i n i i n l i .i r s e s t e d I i i
teted t o October M i ^ h i ^ . m c o m m e r c i a l c r o p is. p [ , i a-d t
l,W4,0<>0 bushels. l.!»fi l . o e n i h . i r r r l . s a n d t h e t o t a l c r o p i l
r
t l i e ITO^I had left 1 I ..'((j'J.i '< n.1 b u s h e l s .
l.,i.sl \ e a r t b e e o n .
f a n n e r s b> that m e r c i a l c r o p w . i , I ,(><»!<.<)(> l i . i r r e N
lal
t i j i Kiin.Miis a n d t h e t o t . d . i ^ r i e i i l t n r . ' I c r o p 1 1 , s " . " , ' i o n
••itM* e n c o u r a g i n g h n s l i e l . s .
T prices.
.
Farm
I . a l i o r:
D i e s u p p l y " f I i r' >
report tin- av- la h o r , as a r e s , i It o f a s p e c i a l i n p i, ".. .
'3J.V5 bushels per is f o u n d t o h e e , p i t l t o o n | \ i i i , ] , , ' '
fp i n t h r State o f < c u t o f t h e . d e m a n d .
The
awr.i.o
T h e erop produced W . l ^ e s ] i ; i i d h \ t h e n i o i i l h i.s S l . ' i i ; i l
1
iK>(> b u s h e K T h e h o a r d a n d ><> I « it b o u t b o a r d
1 Ii"
except in a few a v e r a g e ll.iv u,,LM's i s > ' _ ' > o w i t h b " i i d
?TO counties where a a n d S.'t.d") v v i t h o t i t l e w d .
l i e Mippi'.
fiifp
l i t lit-11 d i s i o |
the field lat< i i i
"
•
>
is i > 111 >
in,md
ISK
*
if
potatoes
led
localities
( W o n 0t i f s
b\
uttier
a
•)'' \<i r c e n t
o f n o r m a I.
is (in p e r c e n t
i han Usual
itlord,
"t
h e e a i, si- t , "i a i • I
ill m a n ; , cast
ailing
" ayes
to
e \ e ti
p i.
lief
the pre
11 t h e i , In i r
« •
fiist
Irop
in
in
I'lilted
September
iels
niakiiif.'
[,421,00()
of
1
\, i l l b e a t
1,, I. i • r
the
-mill
Van
C,re-or\
to
\nken
show
s.M u n l a v , ( ) •
and del
U'mter
• -1 r a t e
| o p |,,r
j • S S O I 11 I , o
I'rice
the
Hi stie
I'otd
I|,,
A-ccrn
"ii
I I.iff,oil
Alcohol
a ' i.d
1
rotting
fvetHKe vield of all " ' ' N l ' ' '
' f o u n d to be l.'J'i ' ' ' " ' '"•' '' : ' "
Hutkrs the l o t a j t" " " ; - " ' , ' ' !1 •'' "
rhile lust o ar's "
' ' '
T|„.
\ ( ( . , ten
: „ l t i e |, , • a ton*.
, o r • .hunt
C o l l e c t s '3 >'••
The
ft
'j.in
|HI
,,f
,\
;i I
am , ,1
to
,
ihol
"• F.ggs
, , ! ' , c'lSff
Chin,--,
i;n,:,i-,iis
• ! , (
eh.''
~ :- r u s e
,-
II s, r,, e l
l e s s . |-- e, ii 11 t i " t o n
(lie
I h e o ; | \ cs o f
si ie s.i \-,
m
fire
I t is l i e
I
pleff
e o l l e , • j , - ' i c- 1-.
, ,st I , , m
)lV fl
1bench
SoelJ,)!s[
the editor*
Q000-NI0HT
MIMAQI
of
,S',1 il'.'l.
I I. \ i II •; s e e n
her
heart
Island Now Sheep
The
ami t h e
islnfa;
WORKED OUT AS HE PLANNED
.
, • •'
cn.o.n,
tie
LTeii'er
this
( s :, \]r\\
jn
Shrewd M i n i n g P r o m o t e r K n e w Just
H o w Long Worr.en W o u l d Keep
Secret He I m p a r t e d .
nect-i-
applied
le-tier
i'lHIl
{'. "•)
am 1
, I III , l i y
I'.HI?.
the copper
Me
ill tlie
coin-
i nf
I'.ttld
I,
f o r sltoep
he
I I \ eij
ill
u l m had :n,j
I i 1 >.,.; i_
lllue,
as,,|e
IK conhded
t lie
to litem
the
of
MENHere Is the
Overcoat
Spot
for You.
h i s j,] f u m -
heels
LT'-iter
part
of
t '
blacks
. .-I
are
;
ttm animals
I : i ' 1<• " \ t r a f e e i i i n j r
A !'
medium
country.
Mie
i m o 11::
•s
!'
in
nibber
in
the
that
.mitley
:rs i : n-i r w i s e s
Indies
of
Al'hoii-
To this afi.,ir he in-, i'ed nil ' h e
m e n n, t|,e , , , ^ , ,
BlIR-
the owner
l m - ' , i r, n-j
u i i i,
!h'
Sou ' h
We -i -'inn. '. ho ,,w m ,|
V, h ' T e
^ e a t".
dllfiliC
' i n ' s | , , , |._ _•,! \ e a ' a i v h |, • r t y i n i h ^
eil •
is f l o w
'.en; lire
,
the
.yc . n i n i :
in
- ' , , ! ' ' i'-'and | fc e-' a r e - oxer m sheep.
Neighboring i s i . n . s ! ; , c Imij; f,ei-n
Used
p s \ e | | i , | , ,L'\ o f s, | | ;!,__' \\ )|S p f O
d ;spos,i 1 ,.f ((,e \V, i s n . a i i t i
Pasture.
I ' u U > l l a l l k.
p i ' - i of < hr. l y h n n k . and
r i m n ; n i : ^ iId f<
:(bl\
i
y ; ,rd's h a y ;s •,, !,•• t u n ed n:'o a sheep
pasture.
T i e l e n d of the A m e r i c a n
Wooten
The
-^aiia
see
l a - , I t'om o n e
one aI
',
i
a '
o e r a '_d)iss
1.,'idy—ThHt gentleman ^^'as most I'o- j
lite.
W h a t i s he?
|
:
I ' l i e n d — A civil engineer.
LEGAL NOTICES
'
a' li'tiiomn le I he f o] Ion i i i f :
"1
w i nhl l i k e
t"
G i r l * L i k e It F l a t t e r .
ser> \ , ! | ma ke a
M.iti
f M i c h i ^ . , n , t h e ' ' i re n it C o u r t
f,,r
| | ) ( . ('
i ^
I
I , i \ Ilie stun :
in
I i o i d d 1 I'll s) > o i | 11 ut t o p e t i , • \ m y r a i l - ' C I I i , I ' l l
tl'die;,
V il l i o l l t
, ..
l>i„
if
W i n n t a l k i n g wifh mo«t p r e t t y
\\>'r»< t o l d t h a t it's; n o m u t t e r
How
Mat y o u r ' e n v e r n j i t t o n m ,
T l i f y Ilk*, t o h » v f it f l a t t e r . •
Klrlfl. ,
I
'I l l t t l 111 ,
\ s.
Nettle
\\ ilbn—toil
\ \ i i-hiliL't " I , I >i t e n d . i ll I
( I I lid'
G e t t i n g H i m Placed.
> 111 I p e tu I I :, cr i n t h e ( I i r u 11 C m i >•( f, i r
!' 'O . |
' i s of W e
i m M i l , ',;_ - l o c k ,
"
W
h
a
t
k i n d of a f e l l o w is W a t s o n ? " i
I I \ I! t il s t o 11 ( , 11; i) I \ _ ,, | ( 1 , , -, ( 11 <) iv ,, f
, '. i, b a I \ m i e . ! !
c, ; , e 1 ,IHMI ! ,.|- i t - i i t .
>i |ili ti.lier
\. I)
I U.'U.
n s k f d Hlnek.
., '
; . o ; | - 11, ,, 111 I , ! * \ i, i _ e t ' , s t , , v , a 11
I I s i t i w n-i,, rii ,
p i a- , i i n a
1,, i h , "W e l l , " replied White, "lie's the kirwl '
ll lis ! >c ' ' , i , , o i i y i o h ' l '. s e \ e,' • I t i e -IIt i e r :
1,. . " l i l e n , . , :,h ' L l
, h ill
of
fellow w h o skates on t h i n ice, rocks ,
- i o s, , • s I, in | rit erfe re with my ' e r' s 11 i , . i,
s i, - b e e n . - . s u e d o u t o t
1
be
boat, races a t r a i n to Mm crossinj; j
; mis m liip" mat kef "
' l l I, n i b r t i e -e r| o f s , i d ( o | i t t t o r
;
ml
looks to see how- much L'.'is there
1
ib
, o n i s e , e \ el V ' n ' l v CiC. e h e r -;,.
b e i p j i c a 1-. n c - ,,( -. . u l d e l e l - d a l i t t h e r e
- in the tank w i t h a l i n h t g d match.
:in
i n . a i 11 I Ii 11 ' i n
•• i 11 i
i <' 11 l i t n o t b e
1 e,; p r
x
' I ' O K v |[
Nol'odv knows w h y he has been able
si n i 11 o a o r m t , , ••,- ( h e r » t i , r n t\\<
i ',! t o b e d
to
h \ f jis li>nj» us lie hits."
• i n i o..t I i c m s , ( h i t I be ,,, u l d e f e n d '
' i r , » l : I I I I M . I C I . , \\ ll h ' l
i l l . l i e I n -' a r i . d e n t i , I s u d St :it e o f
: 1 a t ; e, i -1 i i i, a a I , I , \ \ m
,| I n i t e
I m p o r t e d Joke.
\ | I I h I L , " , ^ . , - c o i n i 11 i l
therem
or
-I s -i,-| r, • i .
i,
, , , n ; 1,,
•\l 'hiV.
el s r » ] i e r e , c a t - i id i '
• • , , ! . . - 11 11. t r i f 11 T'--ot
i,crW'h,
' binI \ mi ^ i y fn t ' e i t
W a l l Sti-i i ' J o
t; d
h i \ m a h, i II ri l i r u e d » r l i t h e < e r t ill
>-d ' imp .UiisL nio\ '.'
c i t e , , ! I h i d i e t i tf
of
s ,id
' C o n ut \
S s t e i - l (,nI\ t l i , i n k e d h i m f o r p i , kt h e r e o n , i n d o r s e d , -1 , m i n . - 111., ( a f t f I
. ;p my handhiic.
l i i l la i-iit -.'- i •-, h i u d l l ' n u n t h e sa , d d e
lino! lnT —My dear c l r l
\ m i must
t e i i d . i 111 i i ai i d
not he t o a nil
m said
•".nil It'll t i t b e so h e n M l y •.'I'atel'ilh I t ' s
s t a t e o ] M i c h l _ a n o n o r hi t • > t < t i n r e
.ot dorm nowadays.
I ti I'll i\\}
o 1 S I H ) s i , i n n , i in ., e n n c it i o n
o|
W il i i s I
I .\ o i r . , 11 o n i r \
| , , r sa m
plamlit'.
II
l > O l l l l l - It I I ) , t h a t t h e
- a i d ( l e t i t a l i l i t t l a n d e I ' . \ \ . W b i II C t ' 111,
c.iusc h i s a [ipea r a nee t o ,
tMiteretLin
- a i d ( i H I rt am l
< i si\, 11 h i n
I iirei
Bobble: Didn't
moiilbs after
the date ot tins
order,
Jack
tell
you
a n d t h a t in ease ot h i s i p p e a r a m e In
l i d , la e l , \
II
i ' ,. .s
i.liUillU
'.''Ul' I , ' ' d i d i n t o
]
|o[| • l i r n d
o . | | h l l \ INC
FOR
oit, Red Star Vapor Stoves
lew Perfection Oil Cookers
Ypsilanti Oil Cookers
trican Gasoline Cookers
5-?-
Pi
to
ct
DQUARTERS
4\f»
' , * • « <
f o r H month's s u b s c r i p t i o n ' o r 1,'JUi.
° ° " ''nbles.
' ' ' " ' l l r w o-n i, .J n n s' * u r>
h.-aii of her lo\(>r.
I ' I i " fill
below
I'otatocs
be
P L E A S E
bushels.
bushels
to
A T T E N T I O N
,: i I e l ' l | ,l I i el I
,s o r ' !• l a s \\ ]: i l e . u s v e i l
of : * J ,
the
of
it.
a, a s
S h e s,,ss i t
\ e s | e l 1|
D o
37,KV'/,O<MI
of
y^\\
f
in other
»N I'd i | i l i l e Y O U R
nth.
- m l , H lie
the
hand
,th
I ^ V r u p
">;,
ah
> .nlahle.
t h e K i-»iari
T h e ii^tter of tiny fe«t w a s h e a r d
from t h e 'head of t h e stairs. Mrs.
K i n d e r b y raised h e r h a n d , w a r n i n g
S e n p l b u i i h*- p r i c e : s 'A.(UK),(KM) r u h l f s .
ttie «ueuibers of h e r b r i d g e club to be
D a - appai't-i'l p a r : n i ' i \ is I'xpJHinprl h y
silent.
a no!,- sa' i|,y T11;i' Mm d i f f f r e i i c , ' in
" H u s h ! " she said softly. "Tbe chilprice for the first and vfn-und monrh's
d r e n u r e going to deliver t h e i r good«111J>• • r-.f,rJwrJ is dm- ro ftm poTiumted
n i g h t message. It a l w a y s gives me a
dopro, in t mil of -|n ruhlt-- in the n«'\f
feeling vt r e v e r e n c e t o b e a r t h e m . Lisfour weekT i e ilti.ulint o| ' l u > (]•'•'
ten : "
fii'eciarion is s ( , me e r t t i i n . h n w e o r . |
There
was a m o m e n t
of
tense
•hai
siihsenpi ion pen HS i-Hnnor h e ;
Mlence, t h e n : " M a m m a , " c a m e t h e
i| n o ' . T| moi-f r 1,..: i ". ,, j i o , r j r', > in ad
message In a shrill whisper, "Willie
VHIieo.
N e w \ i l l ! . I ,!l,es.
found
a
bedbug."—Ithaca
JournalNews.
" L i t t l e M o t f i e r s " W o r k in S h i f t * .
Youngsters -A|M, us,- tin* u l d e p h i / n
Nothing W a s L e n t
'.iK,k.ii^ :'oi' 1 he orvi-n i-jiv it lit j piii'iii's
in f i o n t of <'it\ hall us n p l u v - r o i i i i i l
The caller looked flushed a n d i n d i g U1V s e e n > , - , a , i u - p , » > ! t l i > l i s o f s a IJ1 0 _ •in ; l i i - e\ei-:nvs have adopted n sysnant.
" A r e y o u the society e d i t o r ? "
" l e a - 1 hi", 1.,)1 j;ei t h e hest look ai
tem tbiit makes l i - l i t e r the task of
she impaired.
ih.- j , . , . i i i n i och, ( i l P,sf r s a i ini.s .ire e \ those
O h o look
at'ler hahle.s,
I'lider
"Yes, m a d a m .
W h a t can I do for
' l a i - e i t m i o j ' and tlio>,- who ehnm to
the system otie \>am-jsier w i l l herd a
you 7"
I a v , - c , - i i ;r i i l ' e e l i » c l y (J 11 e s [ n i n e i I h \
irronp of almiit rw iMitv or n w i i t y - t i \ H
"Your puper said In Its a c c o u n t of
o i ,..(•: s.
1'in- ^ i t - o i l r a \ i s h o t l A a e l l y
vMirds on the steps and keep rbcrii
t h e HfTiiir at my house t h a t floral decoa lle.v dlsciiV i T > . h i l t t h e r e i s j , j ^ l e u t
amused ami s.iV ' , , | 1." minutes or
r a t i o n s 'lent beauty to t h e scene.' I
f' -.1,1,1 o i ' 111 t e l I ' M H i ! h e a l l e g e , I [ i h e • o. Then s|ie , s retmved in t n r n f,y
wish you would h a v e y o u r p a p e r s t a t e
1,0,1,1 iion. I»oct,,i'
.Mo|,|.-1-, .1 I m t e l i
,!n»: h e r .
t h a t the floral b e a u t y w a s not l e n t ;
se,ci;;,s'. das j-.ist w r i l t e i i an ela'iorate
< if e m i r - " , the s\ stem doesn't H I e
v e r y t h i n g WHS paid for."
•- " i , ihe v.,veil I'.I.V. ami says be \ > H \ S flit! aloi.cr st| ),,t hi \ . T h e r e jirt^
lc
it •'• I I " e . ^ i i h o ]t J a ! v . |!KlT. T h e
qimrrels. ; , l o i i t l i m e and t u r n of work,
EH—WHAT?
I
! • :
III i i . il
:;• l l e u r v M l e r s ,
but f o r the most part it enables all the
o'
'
, Hi " <>1 • i'l" \\ 11 l i e s s e s .
l-aist side " i i t t i e m o t h e r s ' to jjer in a
1 Ii
'tTIie punllshed a r t
t u r n at J l a w n ; : ;ind r o l l e r skatiji^' w i t h m:,i-l-.,ble novel ,,n this rare plieimme, v i l , h ,^|eetin.ir t h e i r l i t t l e
broods.—
[•"ii.
T i n - heroine v , : i - a .MMIH;' S,-,#i- ^ t . . A Yr>rl; Sun.
I he i h
n o r m i i . I '<• IJJ ^:
Country
;
.1'"ii-. I. L k o m t . c . - .
:tf»k;i,;i '/,\M I
• ••hen h a - nisi I f e n r v i e . ' i ' f l ,'if 1'nris
i-urlur i
liter
'! i
Hardware
his
. I ^ U I T
to
the
pi
, i tit i t t ' s
bill
And
o n like
motmn
it
ifurther
o r d e r e d t h a i w i t h i n (w»mt> d i \ s after
t h e d a t e l i e rrui,
-1 h e p i a ) i d l tt e a Use ,
n o t i c e o f this o r d e r t o be p u b l i s h e d in
Mn- I ' l i i c k n e )
Ihspateh
a ne\cspiper
jirmtcd,
published
and circulated
in
said C o u n t y
of Livingston
a n d that
s u c h p u b l i c a t i o n he c m i t i n i l e d o n c e l l :
each v c e k f o r s i \ u c e k s m suci'e.ssion,
or that be IMIIM- a c " p \ of this order to
be p e r s o n a l l y served u p o n said d e f e n d
ant
at least
twenty
d t \ s before tin
time herein prescribed f o r bis appearance.
A n d on like m o t m n 11 IS M ' U T I I
I i i O H n K H l . n . that the s.ud plaintiff
canst- a copy of tins o r d e r to in- mailed
to said defendant at his last k n o w n
post office address, by registered m a i l ,
and a r e t u r n receipt d e m a n d e d , at lens.'.
•JO days before the t i m e herein p r r
scribd f o r the appearance o f said defendant.
.JOSH'M I I . COLLINS,
C i r c u i t .ItuL-e.
Hu.sines.s Address,, U n w e l l , M i c h .
W i l l i s L. I . p m s
A t t o r n e y f o r I'l.iintifT.
Except
at
If you want the most for your money—with
plenty to choose from, get one of our overcoats at—
and higher
few
By L. F . V a n Z e l m
Western Nf»tp*p»r Umo*
•t
;*]
STYLEPLUS ALL WOOL
FALL SUITS
Night.
b a b y ' s p r r s r n e r i n x tinm«>
W i l l «1 w a > ' s b n n c v l r l i c M .
K\ci
p t , o f c o u r s e w h e n i t iR r r , n «
A n d keeps ynu up all night.
Impossible.
Cheery F r i e n d —Wlinr. my dewr o l d
ehap, i l l HfairiV
.Mi, but ynti should
f o l l o w my advice nnd ent mnrp onions
— nt leHst \\\n a (]»y. T h e y a r e t h e
secret of l i f e .
I n v a l i d — P . u t imw do vou keep them
H secret?
$25
$30 $35
W. J. DANCER & CO.
Sioclcbridge,
"
*Vv':
AW.WHATS THE USE
j *
$22.50 $27.50 $32.50
A
Always at Home.
roii««on;:in (to first tmmp)—Where
do yon live?
F i r s t T r a m p — I ain't pot no home.
T o second t r a m p — A n d w h o r e do yon
live?
Second T r a m p — M e and h i m live t0»
pettier; we're pardaera.
%
Belted models or half belts, and plain
models,, double brested, very smart.
last week t h a t
you
were
the
flrat g i r l he ever
loved 7
811:
Y• •,
why?
Bobble: Then
he lied to a girt
at the Sunday
School p l c n l «
today.
•i f ( o n i p h l m l t o be Id i a], am l a enpv
thereof
scrveti iijum t h e .ittornev f o r
t l i e p i a l i l t i tf
" t i l n n C\s i-ut \ s | \
days
after M T I I M '
,, p e n h I i n " f a c o p y o t
s.ud lull, a n d n o t i c
of t i n , order, and
that m d e f a u l t U n r e e l , t | i r said bill be
t a k e n as l o n f e s - . e d b\ said d e f e n d a n t .
I
Coats of every wanted style and fabriclarge racks of them. All wool materials
andnicely tailored coats that hold their
shape and looks.
TOLD HER
THE SAME
THING
c a n s(.
«...
Fanny Changed Her Mind
i«'i r .ch«